Want this question answered?
fluid is flowing from one point to another point in a specified volume which change in it s time
The SI unit of electric charge is called the coulomb. It is a derived unit, and is defined as the amount of charge moved by a steady state current of one ampere for one second. Alternatively, it is defined as the amount of charge across a capacitance of one farad charged to a potential of one volt. In terms of elementary charge, from nuclear physics, it is defined as the charge represented by about 6.24150965 x 1018 protons or electrons.
Not a steady but a moving electric field can be produced by ever changing magnetic field.
Electric current
current
fluid is flowing from one point to another point in a specified volume which change in it s time
The time rate of flow of electric charge, in the direction that a positive moving charge would take and having magnitude equal to the quantity of charge per unit time: measured in amperes. See more.
The correct term for the flow of electricity is current. Current is the number of electrons flowing per second in a circuit. The unit of electrical current flow is called the ampere. When 6.28 billion electrons pass a given point, this is called 1 coulomb. 1 coulomb per second is equal to 1 amp of current. Current flow is measured with an ammeter.
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.
A circuit that is complete and unbroken with flowing electric current normally has steady supply of voltage with no broken links. Electrical energy flows to light up a bulb or do similar work. Its status is complete, nothing else is needed.
I believe you're asking about a 'current'. An example of one is the Eastern Australian Current.
Not a steady but a moving electric field can be produced by ever changing magnetic field.
The SI unit of electric charge is called the coulomb. It is a derived unit, and is defined as the amount of charge moved by a steady state current of one ampere for one second. Alternatively, it is defined as the amount of charge across a capacitance of one farad charged to a potential of one volt. In terms of elementary charge, from nuclear physics, it is defined as the charge represented by about 6.24150965 x 1018 protons or electrons.
electric current
Electric current
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.
current