In the SI measurement system, a meter is a "base unit". However, the definition relies on the prior definition of the second.
The basic unit is meter. Centimeter and the cubic value are derived from the basic meter.AnswerIt isn't. It's a submultiple of a 'base unit'.
No. 1 meter is a base unit of length. 1cm³ is a derived unit for Volume. Hence 1cm³
Mass: kilogram Length: meter Volume: cubic meter (this is not a base unit, since it is derived from the meter)
A hectare is a derived unit of area in the metric system, equivalent to 10,000 square meters. It is commonly used in land measurement and agriculture. The hectare is not a fundamental unit, as it is based on the square of the meter, which is the fundamental unit of length in the International System of Units (SI).
Yes, it is part of the SI. It is a derived unit.Yes, it is part of the SI. It is a derived unit.Yes, it is part of the SI. It is a derived unit.Yes, it is part of the SI. It is a derived unit.
A square meter is a derived unit because it is a unit of measurement that is calculated by multiplying two one-dimensional units (meters) together to represent a two-dimensional area. It does not have a unique physical definition but is derived from the fundamental unit of length.
If you use meters for length, then the derived unit is the square meter.
yes no maybe so
The square meter.
m can mean milli or 10-3 and as such is a multiplier not a unit m = mass (kg) or other is a fundamental and not a derived unit M = moles is a fundamental unit m = meter is a fundamental unit and not derived
The meter is the metric base unit for volume, and the cubic meter is the derived unit.
It means that it is defined on the basis of other units. For example, in the SI, the meter and the second are two of the seven "base units"; the unit for area is the square meter (meter x meter), so it is a DERIVED unit; so is the unit for speed, meters / second.
icecream is honestly the best thing in the world, and it is a fundamental unit
The basic unit is meter. Centimeter and the cubic value are derived from the basic meter.AnswerIt isn't. It's a submultiple of a 'base unit'.
In the SI, the square meter is derived from the meter (meter x meter). But in general, which units are derived and which are base units really depends on the system of measurement chosen. You could define a unit of area as a base unit, and derive a length as the square root of that - although I don't think any serious system of units has actually done that so far.
No. 1 meter is a base unit of length. 1cm³ is a derived unit for Volume. Hence 1cm³
The joule is the most direct answer, yet this unit is a derived unit from force times distance (the unit newton-meter). However, the newton-meter, is also derived. In terms of kg, m, and s the joule is: kg-m2/s2. BTU - British Thermal Unit.