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I am not sure what you mean with "force constant". The SI unit of force is the newton.
The SI unit of force is the Newton, regardless of where the force came from.
No, the calorie is an older unit. The SI unit is the Joule.
Its SI unit is Ampere metre or Am.
The SI base unit for mass is the kilogram
The SI unit of electric current is the ampere. While it is an SI base unit, it can also be considered to be a combined unit, coulombs per second.
It is the fundamental measurement unit, in the SI system, for measuring electric charge.
I am not sure what you mean with "force constant". The SI unit of force is the newton.
The SI unit of force is the Newton, regardless of where the force came from.
In the SI system the radiation constant (Stefan-Boltzmann constant) is measured in W/m2.K4.
SI and CGS unit of porosity is the constant between the molar fluxes. This is due to molecular diffusion and the gradient.
The coulomb is not a unit of current, it is a unit of charge. Current, known as amperes, is coulombs per second.
It is m3kg-1s-2
It is Newtons per metre.
A microampere is a unit of current in micro coulombs per second, while a volt is a unit of electrical pressure in joules per coulomb. The two units are not convertible.
That's the unit for the electric field. The SI units for electric field are, precisely, newtons/coulomb - or the equivalent, volts/meter. This unit doesn't have a special name.
h=6.62606896×10−34 J·s