The best answer that I could find is that inertia units are the same as mass (kg). Which makes sense, the more mass an object has, the more force it takes to accelerate (get it to move, or move in a different direction). I found this on Physicsforums dot com (it is not letting me post a link at this time)
Inertia can be measured by an object's mass. That would make the SI unit the kilogram.
Inertia is a property of matter that describes its tendency to maintain its current state of motion unless acted upon by an external force. An example of inertia in a scientific sentence could be: "The large mass of an object results in greater inertia, making it harder to change its velocity."
The scientific unit for electric current is the ampere.
The scientific unit used for pressure is the pascal (Pa).
Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.
Since inertia is represented numerically by an object's mass. Unit of inertia in S.I UNIT is Kilogram
The unit of Inertia is kg and the Moment of Inertia is kg*m^2
Is the S.I or metric system the unit of inertia or mass is kilogram.
Moment of inertia has unit kg m2
The word is "unit", not "unot". You can use kilograms (or any other unit of mass) for inertia. The more kilograms an object has, the greater its inertia.
Inertia can be measured by an object's mass. That would make the SI unit the kilogram.
The inertia. This is directly related to the object's mass.
Inertia is a property of matter that describes its tendency to maintain its current state of motion unless acted upon by an external force. An example of inertia in a scientific sentence could be: "The large mass of an object results in greater inertia, making it harder to change its velocity."
Anything from the Metric Sysytem would be what you call a "scientific unit"
The scientific unit for electric current is the ampere.
The scientific unit used for pressure is the pascal (Pa).
Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.