The cubic meter. Also, cubic decimeter (= liter), cubic centimeter (= milliliter), cubic millimeter, cubic kilometer, etc.
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
No.* Mass is measured in kilograms. * Volume is measured in cubic meters (which is not a base unit, but a derived unit).
Yes, the joule is a derived unit in the International System of Units (SI) and is used to measure energy and work.
The unit for force, the newton (N), is a derived unit in the International System of Units (SI). It is derived from the base units of mass, length, and time.
Volume is a derived quantity because it is calculated by multiplying three lengths together in the SI system of units. The SI base units for length are meters, so volume is expressed in cubic meters (m^3). It is not considered a fundamental quantity like length, mass, or time, which are base units in the SI system.
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
The basic SI unit is for length. Volume is a measure which is based on length-cubed and so it is a derived (not complex) unit.
The derived SI unit that is equal to the non SI unit of volume, the liter, is the cubic meter (m^3). One liter is equivalent to 0.001 cubic meters.
Volume is measured in units derived from the fundamental unit of length.
In the SI the unit of volume is m3.1 m3 = 1 ooo liters (L); but the liter is also accepted as a tolerated unit of volume.CommentThe litre is not an SI unit, so it is neither a base nor a derived unit. It is a metric unit that may be used alongside SI units.
That will obviously depend on the system of units chosen. In the SI (International System), it is a derived unit (mass divided by volume).
The SI unit for volume is the Litre, which is a derived unit based on one one-thousandth of a cubic metre.
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.
The SI unit for volume is the liter, and for length it is the meter. The unit of mass is the kilogram. In chemistry and physics these units are commonly used as the international standard units of measurements.
The unit of length in SI is metre (m). The unit of mass in SI is kilogram (kg). The unit of volume in SI is litre (L). The derived unit of density in SI is Mg/m3 (or g/cm3). Length, mass, density, volume are not units but characteristics of materials and objects.
If, by 'metric system', you mean the 'SI system', then there is no base unit for volume. The unit for volume is called a 'derived unit', and it is the cubic metre (m3).
No.* Mass is measured in kilograms. * Volume is measured in cubic meters (which is not a base unit, but a derived unit).