water. a gram is one milliliter of water. a milliliter is a cubic centimeter. in degrees Celsius 0 is freezing for water and 100 is boiling. a calorie is the energy it takes heat a milliliter/gram/cubic centimeter of water by 1 degree. so on and so on it is all based on water.
AnswerThe units gram, litre, Celsius, and centimetre are not SI units. They are cgsA units which predates the SI system. The SI system is based on the mksA system, which has the metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, candela, and mole as base units.
No SI unit is 'based on water'.
The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. However the prefixes are based on the gram.
Feet, miles, gallons, pounds, etc.
Its based on the speed of light.
The International System of Units (SI) is based on seven base units: the meter for length, kilogram for mass, second for time, ampere for electric current, kelvin for temperature, mole for amount of substance, and candela for luminous intensity. These base units are used to derive other units for quantities such as area, volume, and velocity.
The SI unit for measuring matter is the kilogram (kg). This unit is used to quantify the amount of mass in an object or substance.
the SI is a systenm based on the number ten.
10. SI units are based on the decimal system. For many purposes they can be seen as based on a system of 1000.
Kelvin The SI base unit of temperature is the kelvin.
It is based on multiples of 10.
weight
Powers of ten
The SI system is based on multiples (and divisions) of ten. There are seven base units, all others are derived from these.
yes
multiples of ten.
si
si units are based on the metric system system international (French) international system (English)
The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. However the prefixes are based on the gram.