One amp represents the flow of 1 coulomb of electrical charge per second. Therefore answer is the number of electrons in one coulomb:
6.2415 × 1018 electrons
See How_many_electrons_are_in_1.0_coulomb_of_chargefor more information.
There are six quintillion, two hudred eighty-one quadrillion or (6,218,000,000,000,000,000) electrons in an ampere
Answer
There are NO 'electrons in an ampere'. An electron is a sub-atomic particle, whereas an ampere is a unit of measurement.
An Ampère is a unit of current, not of electric charge. One Ampère may be thought of as 1 Coloumb / second, although in SI it is defined the other way (Ampère being the base unit). Since 1 Coloumb is 6.24 × 1018 elementary charges, one Ampère is that same number of electrons per second.
You can't convert that. An electron has a certain (negative) charge; it makes sense to ask how many electrons have a charge of -1 coulomb, since the coulomb is a unit of charge. But the ampere is not a unit of charge.
There is no meaningful answer to the question. An ampere is a measure of a flow of electric current whereas the number of electrons would be a stock.
A coulomb, on the other hand, is equivalent to the charge of 6.24*10^18 electrons.
An amp (1 amp) = 1.6x10^-19 coulombs/sec which is the current of 1 electron.
1 coulomb/second = 1/1.6x10^-19 electrons = approx. 6.25x10^18 electrons
So, the answer would be 6.25x10^18 electrons
"One amp" means one coulomb of electrons flowing past you every second.
1 coulomb = 6,241,510,000,000,000,000 electrons (6.24151 x 1018)
6.25e18 electrons per second is one ampere.
Ampere is a unit for electric current.
well, on the periodic table of elements a chlorine atom has 17 electrons, usually the first level holds up to two electrons and the second level holds up to 8. so if my figuring is correct there should be fifteen electrons on the second energy level.
Helium has only two electrons, and they share one orbital (forming a complementary pair).
The first energy level can hold 2. The second level can hold 8. The third level can hold 18. Fourth and beyond can hold 32.
There are 3 shells total in the atom of Chlorine. The first shell has 2 electrons because the first shell of any atom can only hold up to a maximum of 2 electrons. The second shell holds 8 electrons because the second shell of any atom can only hold 8 electrons maximum. The third shell holds 7 electrons in the Chlorine atom, but the third shell of any atom can hold up to 18 electrons as a maximum.
Chlorine itself is an element. It is on the Periodic Table (of the Elements). It is made from protons, electrons and neutrons.
8
4
6.25 x1018 electrons make up 1 Coulomb of negative charge.
2
2 (two).
about 3*10^28
7 protons 7 electrons 8 neutrons
total kilowatt hours, divide by voltage and multiply by 1000 to get amp-hours, multiply by 3600 to get amp-seconds, multiply by 6.2 x 10e18 electrons/amp-second,and you wil end up with a rather large number-probably about 2 X 10E27 electrons-based on 2000 KWH per month (a guess at usage in 1986)
insulators do not have free electrons
No, the electrons are around the nucleus, not in the nucleus.
i would check you have a good ground the amp will still power up but no power will be put through the system if the ground is not good
there is no possible answer because atoms are not counttable