If you mean the mass, that is the gram.
If you mean the mass, that is the gram.
If you mean the mass, that is the gram.
If you mean the mass, that is the gram.
There is no unit for "substance", so it really depends what aspect of a substance you want to measure: for example a length, surface area, volume, mass, density, etc.
"Amount of substance" is an informal name for mass, so that would be the gram.
If you mean the mass, that is the gram.
Mol
The cgs power unit is the erg, a dyne-centimeter.
A barye is a unit of pressure under the CGS system.
CGS unit of time is Second,s.
The CGS unit of weight (no longer used) was the gram
abampere
The cgs power unit is the erg, a dyne-centimeter.
hertz
Statcoulumb is the unit of charge in cgs system.
A barye is a unit of pressure under the CGS system.
CGS unit of time is Second,s.
There isn't one except by converting all the dimensions in the definition of an ampere into cgs units.
The SI unit for density is kg/m3In the CGS system, it is g/cci have no idea:P
The CGS unit of weight (no longer used) was the gram
abampere
The centimetre-gram-second system (abbreviated CGS or cgs) is a metric system of physical units based on centimetre as the unit of length, gram as a unit of mass, and second as a unit of time. All CGS mechanical units are unambiguously derived from these three base units, but there are several different ways of extending the CGS system to cover electromagnetism.CGS approach to electromagnetic units The conversion factors relating electromagnetic units in the CGS and SI systems are much more involved - so much so that formulas for physical laws of electromagnetism are adjusted depending on what system of units one uses. refer to link below for methods
A mole is a number, this is not different in cgsor SI or in whatsoever 'unit system'.So the answer is yes, it can be used in cgs-unit system(The same is true for analogons like 'dozen = 12' and 'gross = 144' and even for pi = 3.14......... etc.).
The relevant SI bases are MKS.Length: cgs system uses centimetre, MKS uses metre = 100 centimetres. Mass: cgs system uses grams, MKS uses kilogram = 1000 grams. Time: they both use seconds.