no, but i sure as can imagine a system of base units in which "amount of substance", "thermodynamic temperature", and "luminous intensity" are not included (they can be derived from the base units) and one where electic charge replaces electric current as a base unit.
Derived units do not have a single 'look'. They are produced from the base units of a measuring system such as the SI system.In the SI system there are seven base units which are;MetreKilogramSecondAmpereKelvinMoleCandelaAll other units are DERIVED units.For example the units for volume is the cubic metre and density is derived from the metre and kilogram. So density is kilograms per cubic metre in the SI system.
If, by 'metric system', you mean 'SI system', then the base unit for mass is the kilogram
-- Meter -- Kilogram -- Second -- Coulomb
There is no difference they are the same thingAnswerSI is the current version of the metric system.For example, the centimetre, the calorie, and the litre are examples of metric units, but they are not SI units.
The International System of Units, abbreviated as SI from its French title, is a form of the metric system. It is a system of units of measurement which are based on seven base units. Conventionally, the 7 base units are:kilogram (mass)meter (distance)second (time)ampere (electric current)kelvin temperature)mole (amount of chemical substance)candela (luminous intensity).
In a system of units such as the SI, BASE UNITS are defined; other units are derived from those.For example, in the SI, the meter, the kilogram, and the second are base units; the units for area (meters squared), for speed and velocity (meters/second), etc. are derived from the base units. Which units are base units, and which units are derived units, really depends on how the unit is defined. For example, in the SI, pressure is a derived unit; but you can just as well invent a system in which pressure is a base unit, and some other units, that are base units in the SI, are derived in this new system.
ten
No, the base for the metric system is ten.
SI is a base 10 standardized system
Derived units do not have a single 'look'. They are produced from the base units of a measuring system such as the SI system.In the SI system there are seven base units which are;MetreKilogramSecondAmpereKelvinMoleCandelaAll other units are DERIVED units.For example the units for volume is the cubic metre and density is derived from the metre and kilogram. So density is kilograms per cubic metre in the SI system.
The cubic meter.
The International System of Units, abbreviated as SI from its French title, is a form of the metric system. It is a system of units of measurement which are based on seven base units. Conventionally, the 7 base units are:kilogram (mass)meter (distance)second (time)ampere (electric current)kelvin temperature)mole (amount of chemical substance)candela (luminous intensity).
If, by 'metric system', you mean 'SI system', then the base unit for mass is the kilogram
The base unit of time is the second.
-- Meter -- Kilogram -- Second -- Coulomb
It is sometime called the Denary System or the Base 10 system. It works in units of 10.
The International System of Units, abbreviated as SI from its French title, is a form of the metric system. It is a system of units of measurement which are based on seven base units. Conventionally, the 7 base units are:kilogram (mass)meter (distance)second (time)ampere (electric current)kelvin temperature)mole (amount of chemical substance)candela (luminous intensity).