There are 31.25* 10^18 electrons in 5 c0ulombs
charge on one electron=1.6*10-19 C....
so electrom in 0.60c=0.60/1.6*10-19=0.375*1019 electrons..
31207500000000000
(i think)
8*1.6*10^-19
The answer is 2,2469.10e20 electrons
300A means that 300 coulombs of electrons are passing through it per second. 300 coulombs is (1.87 * 10^19) electrons, or simple 300C of electrons.
How many coulombs of electrons go through it each second. A coulomb is 6.23X10^18 electrons.
The amount of electrons it takes to make 80CU of charge would come as an equation. CU stands for Coulombs. It would take 4.9932078e+20 electrons for 80 CU of charge.
elelctric current
Electrons carry a negative charge of -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs. One electron has a charge of -1.6 x 10^-19 C.
1.6x10^-19 coulombs/electron x 12.5x10^18 electrons = 20 coulombs
If a lightening bolt transfers twenty three coulombs to earth how many electrons are transferred?
300A means that 300 coulombs of electrons are passing through it per second. 300 coulombs is (1.87 * 10^19) electrons, or simple 300C of electrons.
539000 times as much as 1 coulomb.
How many coulombs of electrons go through it each second. A coulomb is 6.23X10^18 electrons.
The charge of 1 electron is approximately -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs. For 1110 electrons, the total charge would be -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs * 1110 = -1.776 x 10^-16 coulombs.
0.99840coloumbs
Coulombs
The electric charge is measured in coulombs.
Moving - amperes. Stored - coulombs.
Moving - amperes. Stored - coulombs.
The amount of electrons it takes to make 80CU of charge would come as an equation. CU stands for Coulombs. It would take 4.9932078e+20 electrons for 80 CU of charge.