Volume is measured in units derived from the fundamental unit of length.
Volume is a derived unit in the metric, or SI, system. Volume is length times width times depth. metre x metre x metre = metre3.
Volume is a derived unit.
icecream is honestly the best thing in the world, and it is a fundamental unit
a fundamental unit is kg or m - (also seconds, amps, candela and moles). Density is kg/m3 and is thus derived.
Because nearly every other unit can be derived from them. For example, velocity is length per time (or * time^-1), and volume is length cubed
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
Because.... There are two types of physical quantities. Fundamental and derived. Fundamental units cannot be derived from any of the two types of units while derived units can be derived from these two types of units. It's important to be clearly defined as there are so many indices of the base number. And no one can derive the units if they aren't properly defined
Volume is derived, from length.
yes it is,it is derived by cubing the fundamental unit of length
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
Fundamental quantities are those which do not depend on other quantities. (i.e. temperature, mass, length)Derived quantities are those which depend on fundamental quantities. (i.e. force, volume, density)
Volume is a fundamental quality because of volume per mass. Other familiar fundamental qualities include mass, velocity, speed, m3, cubic meter, and density.AnswerThere is no such thing as a 'fundamental unit' in SI. Units are either 'base units' or 'derived units'. In SI, volume is measured in cubic metres, where the metre is the base unit of length.
Volume is a fundamental quality because of volume per mass. Other familiar fundamental qualities include mass, velocity, speed, m3, cubic meter, and density.AnswerThere is no such thing as a 'fundamental unit' in SI. Units are either 'base units' or 'derived units'. In SI, volume is measured in cubic metres, where the metre is the base unit of length.
Fundamental quantities are quantities that can be measured such as mass, length and temperature. Derived quantities are quantities that has to be calculated such as pressure, volume and work done.AnswerThe SI does not define 'fundamental quantity', instead it uses the term 'Base Unit'. All other units are 'Derived Units', so-called because they are each derived from combinations of Base Units.
Length is fundamental, area is derived.
FT is a derived unit and not a fundamental unit. The fundamental unit cannot be broken down into different forms. The derived units on the other hand are made up of the fundamental units.
the differentiate between fundamental quantity and derived quantity?
fundamental
Fundamental quantity