Charge = (current) x (time)
Time = charge/current = 15/0.005 = 3,000 seconds = 50 minutes .
The amount of charge in 1 Coulomb is exactly 1 Coulomb of charge. That's true whether the charge is positive or negative.
A Coulomb is the SI unit of electric charge, equal to the quantity of electricity conveyed in one second by a current of one ampere.
The unit is the Ampere, equivalent to 1 coulomb of charge per second.
(coulomb) A quantity of electric charge. Passage of 1 coulomb per second along a wire is called 1 amp (ampere) of electric current.
15 ampere. Since current = charge / time
coulomb is the unit of charge and ampere is unit of current
A coulomb is the charge caused by a constant current of one ampere (what current is measured in) in one second.
The coulomb is not a unit of current, it is a unit of charge. Current, known as amperes, is coulombs per second.
Coulomb is the S.I unit of electrical charge. It is equal to a charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second.
The coulomb is the SI unit of electrical charge. A coulomb, a unit of electrical charge, is defined as the amount of electric charge transported by a current of 1 ampere in 1 second. There are 6.241506×1018 electrons (or elementary charges) in a coulomb. A link is provided to the Wikipedia post on the coulomb.
That's the coulomb, equal to the quantity of charge moved by a current of 1 ampere during an interval of 1 second.
The coulomb. It is the charge transported by 1 ampere of current in 1 second.
A coulomb is a unit of electrical charge. It is the charge that passes a point in an electrical circuit in one second when a current of 1 ampere is flowing through the point.
Current is rate of flow of charge, so 1 ampere = 1 coulomb per second. As ampere and seconds are both fundamental units (and coulomb is derived), a coulomb has the dimensions [current][time] i.e. As
Electric charge / current.
A coulomb is a measure of electric charge. An ampere is a measure of electric current - how much charge passes per second. 1 ampere = 1 coulomb / second.
The SI unit of electric charge is the coulomb (symbol: C), defined as the quantity of charge that passes a point in a conductor in one second when the magnitude of the current is one ampere.