Asked by Gwen

Why do scientists use standard units of measurement?
A.Because their tools only measure in these units.
B.Because other units are either too small or too large to work with.
C.So they can communicate findings without confusion.
D.So that people who are not scientists cannot understand them.
Is the answer C?

Answers

Answered by Ms. Sue
Yes.
Answered by some guy
yus its c
Answered by Jazzzmin
a
b
c
d
c
b
b
d
c
a
c
c
d
skeptical
inference
invention or technology
Answered by <3
Is Jazzzmin right?
Answered by IDK
I have no idea, I am not sure where all those answers come from
Answered by Brooklyn
Jazzzmin is trying to confuse y'all don't follow her answers
Answered by cbcdacdbadcdbcdacb
a
b
b
c
c

d
b
b
c
c
Answered by SquiggleZ_on_switch
It's c I got it right
Answered by NONE
SI uses base 10, just like our number system, so it is much easier to learn, remember and convert between units. ... SI is used in most places around the world, so our use of it allows scientists from disparate regions to use a single standard in communicating scientific data without vocabulary confusion
This is not a appropriate answer cbcdacdbadcdbcdacb
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