the charge on one electron is 1.6*10 to the power -19
1C=6*10to power18
1e=1/6*10 to power 18
=[1/6]*10 to power -18
=0.166666.....*10 to power -18
=1.6[rounded off]*10 to power -19
hence the answer
The charge on an electron is never equal to the charge on a neutron. An electron carries one negative charge and a neutron has no net charge.
There is zero net charge as the proton (+ve) and electron (-ve) cancel each other out and the neutron is neutral.
The smallest charge with negative polarity is the charge of an electron, which is -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs.
The electron has exactly one unit of negative charge (-1).
1 electron charge = 1.602 x 10-19 coulomb. The answer to the question is: about 16 percent of one billionth of one billionth of a coulomb.
The charge on an electron is never equal to the charge on a neutron. An electron carries one negative charge and a neutron has no net charge.
Chlorine's charge after accepting an electron is -1, as it gains one negative charge when it accepts an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration.
There is zero net charge as the proton (+ve) and electron (-ve) cancel each other out and the neutron is neutral.
One electron
-1, since each electron has a charge of -1.
electrons... and thus one unit of negative charge....
The charge of an electron in zeets is approximately -1.602 x 10^-19 zeets. This value indicates the negative charge carried by an electron.
If an atom gains an electron, it will have a negative charge because electrons have a negative charge. The atom will now have more negatively charged electrons than positively charged protons, resulting in an overall negative charge.
An electron has a charge of -1. When a Sodium (Na) atom loses one electron, it loses a negative and becomes a stable Sodium ion with a charge of +1.
There is less than one faradays of charge in a single electron. It takes thousands of electron to charge anything and only either protons or neutrons are capable of charging a single electron.
The smallest charge with negative polarity is the charge of an electron, which is -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs.
The electron has exactly one unit of negative charge (-1).