Which of the following is NOT a Fundamental S.I unit?

a

Metre

b

Ampere

c

Newton

d

Second

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Correct Option
c

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Discussions (6)

Paulan52
6 years ago

Collector is the answer. Option C.
Reason: In common emitter configuration, base is the input terminal, collector is the output terminal and emitter is the common terminal for both input and output. That means the base terminal and common emitter terminal are known as input terminals whereas collector terminal and common emitter terminal are known as output terminals.

In common emitter configuration, the emitter terminal is grounded so the common emitter configuration is also known as grounded emitter configuration.

Emmanuel24458
2 years ago

Certainly! The International System of Units (SI) defines seven base units, which are considered fundamental because all other units can be derived from them.

A. Metre is the base unit for length.
B. Ampere is the base unit for electric current.
D. Second is the base unit for time.

However, C. Newton is not a fundamental SI unit. Instead, it is a derived unit for force, expressed in kilograms meter per second squared (kg·m/s²). Therefore, the correct answer is C. Newton.

Gwennyblooms
7 years ago

the answer is C collector and I have reasons

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