That's the volt.
The SI unit of EMF (electromotive force) in a direct current circuit is Volts. The circuits current is measured in ampere's
the unit of "e.m.f" is "volt"
My physics teacher wrote out homework answers for us. On a few EMF problems, he has the EMF unit listed as Weber. On others, he has it as volts. I have a quiz tomorrow so I need to know which SI unit i'm supposed to use. Thanks! Few side notes: the formula we're using is E=delta I (subscript B) /delta t . There was no change in the formula for the different problems or what not. and somehow weber / time went to volts, other times it didn't. BY: VOLT
The unit of measurement for electromotive force (emf) is the volt (V). It represents the potential difference between two points in a circuit that causes current to flow. A voltage source such as a battery or generator can provide this electromotive force.
I believe that it will be meter. SI unit goes by 10's. what is the sI unit for lengthThe basic SI unit of length is meter.the basic si unit of lenght is metric.The SI base unit for length is meter. For temperature, the SI base unit is kelvin.
No, it isn't even an SI unit. The SI unit for mass is the kilogram. The SI unit for volume is the cubic meter.
a british band
EMF stands for Electro-Motive Force, commonly known as Voltage, measured in Volts.
The joule is an SI unit!
No, meter is the SI unit of Length, Si unit of volume is meter3.
The gram is an SI unit. However, the SI base unit is the kilogram, not the gram.
The Kelvin is the SI unit for thermodynamic temperature.