The S.I unit of motion is Newton
The SI unit of force named after the scientist who described the relationship between motion and force is the newton, symbolized as "N." It is named after Sir Isaac Newton, who formulated the three laws of motion.
Yes, the SI base unit for time is one second.
The liter is classed as a non-SI unit accepted for use with the SI. Being one thousandth of a cubic meter, the liter is not a coherent unit of measure with respect to SI.
Inertia can be measured by an object's mass. That would make the SI unit the kilogram.
The SI unit is the newton-metre, the imperial the foot-pound. For more information please see the wikipedia article.
Yes. Meter is the unit of length; it is one of the 7 SI base units.
Meters per second per second, or m/sec2 .
The SI unit for force is the newton, symbolized by "N". It is defined as the force required to accelerate a one-kilogram mass by one meter per second squared.
Meter per secondThere is no standard SI unit for velocity actually. It is a derived unit. Velocity is distance traveled per time together with the direction of motion. The SI unit of distance is the meter (m) and the SI unit of time is the second (s).So the units of velocity in SI units is meters/second (m/s), or ms-1See the Related Questions link to the left "What are all the SI units" for more information about SI units.CommentDerived units are SI units.
The derived SI unit that is equal to the non SI unit of volume, the liter, is the cubic meter (m^3). One liter is equivalent to 0.001 cubic meters.
No one. A horse power is an Imperial measurement unit, not an SI unit and so a metre would not have featured!No one. A horse power is an Imperial measurement unit, not an SI unit and so a metre would not have featured!No one. A horse power is an Imperial measurement unit, not an SI unit and so a metre would not have featured!No one. A horse power is an Imperial measurement unit, not an SI unit and so a metre would not have featured!
No, the SI unit for radius is meters (m) and the SI unit for linear velocity is meters per second (m/s). Radius and linear velocity are related in rotational motion, where linear velocity is the tangential velocity at a certain radius from an axis of rotation.