The unit of force is the newton, no matter what type of force. The unit for the "force" that pushes electrons or other charged particles is the volt - but it's not really a force.
The name given to the force acting on a unit area of an object is pressure. It is calculated as the force applied per unit area and is typically measured in units like Pascals (Pa) or pounds per square inch (psi).
newton
The unit for force is the newton.
Do you mean Standard Unit of Force?
In SI, the unit of force is the Newton.
The unit of force is the newton (N).
There is no "strength of force", just "force". The SI unit for force is the newton.
Force over an area. Pounds per square inch. Kilopascals. mmHg.
Kilogram is a unit for mass, not force.
Newton is the SI unit of force.Newton is the name of a British scientist and the name of unit is to honour him.The unit is actually Kg.m/s2The unit can be derived by the formula.Take the example of weight. It's formula is W = mg . We know that the unit of mass is kg and gravity is m/s2 so the unit of weight becomes kg.m/s2This unit is known as a Newton.It is always given a capital letter because it is someone's name. Other units that are always capitalised (upper case) are Ampere (Amp), Watt, Volt, Coulomb, Kelvin, Celsius, Fahrenheit, Curie, Roentgen because they are also people's names.
kgf