Its SI unit is Ampere metre or Am.
The SI unit of luminous intensity is the candela.
The SI unit of length is the meter or metre.
In the SI system, yes it is.
Radian is the unit for angular displacement is SI system of units.
It really depends on the system of units used. In the international system (SI), it is a base unit.
unlike poles aatract Pole strength is the ability of the two fictitious north and south poles to attract the iron filings. The pole strength of north pole is assumed to be '+m' and that of south pole is '-m'. Its SI unit is Ampere-metre.
There is no "strength of force", just "force". The SI unit for force is the newton.
Pole strength in SI is the Ampere-meter, A*m A = 10-1*c*Fr/s Fr = Franklins = g1/2cm3/2/s m = 102cm So in CGS, pole strength would have the following unit: 101cm5/2*g1/2*c/s2 where cm = centimeter, c = the speed of light, s = seconds and g =gram
The base unit of time in the SI system is the second.
SI unit or Newton
Kilogram is the SI unit for mass.
The SI unit for strength is the Newton (N) defined as one kilogram meter per second squared.
SI unit or Newton
If you mean force, the SI unit is the newton. If you mean the strength of a material - its ability to withstand force - there are different types of strength: look up Compressive strength, Tensile strength, Shear strength. For example, the units for tensile strength are newtons / square meter.
s of course it is unit in SI system.........according to it..........
The kilogram or kilogramme is the base unit of mass in the International System of Units(SI).
tensile strength is usually given as a stress term - force per unit area. In the English system this is pounds per square inch (psi). In metric SI system,it is given in Meganewtons per meter squared (megapascals, MPa)