Power = energy / time. Therefore, the derived unit is joules / second, commonly known as the watt.
work done per unit time
power= net work done / time taken
Volts x Amps = WATTS
A "watt" is a derived unit of power.
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
From the Wikipedia article about the radian: "The unit was formerly a SI supplementary unit, but this category was abolished in 1995 and the radian is now considered a SI derived unit." The radian can be derived as the ratio between two lengths. That makes it a dimensionless unit.
Newton, the unit of force, is defined based on Newton's Second Law (F=ma), as the force required to give a mass of one kilogram an acceleration of 1 meter/second2. Thus, it is derived from these other units.
Velocity is displacement per unit time. Therefore the units of velocity are derived units (ms-1)
Power = energy / time. Therefore, the derived unit is joules / second, commonly known as the watt.
A "watt" is a derived unit of power.
The SI unit for power is the Watt, the most commonly derived unit is for electrical power definition, which is the Kilowatt.
The SI unit of power is the watt, defined as joules/second. Joule is the unit for energy.
There is no SI base unit for power.Power is measured in watts, which is a derived unit, not a base unit.A watt is equal to one joule (newton-meter) per second (J/s).
Impossible to convert a power unit to temperature unit.
a fundamental unit is fixed in unlike a derived unit which is varying
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.
no
yes, cubic centimeter is a derived unit.
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.
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.