The Coulomb. If 1 Coulomb is transmitted per second this is 1 Ampere
The coulomb (C).
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.
The coulomb. It is the charge transported by 1 ampere of current in 1 second.
Yes, the ampere is an SI base unit, one of the seven, and equals the passage of a Coulomb of charge per second. Its official definition has to do with force between current carrying wires though.
The battery has a charge unit instead of being itself a unit. A battery is not a unit. The unit for the electric charge is milliampere-hour.
The coulomb (symbol: C) is the SI derived unit of electric charge. It is defined as the charge transported by a steady current of one ampere in one second:One coulomb is also the amount of excess charge on the positive side of acapacitance of one farad charged to a potential difference of one volt:
In SI system of units, the unit of electric charge is COULOMB
It is the fundamental measurement unit, in the SI system, for measuring electric charge.
The SI unit of electric charge is the Coulomb.
A coulomb, or ampere second, is the SI unit of electric charge. It is equivalent to the combined charge of 6.24 X 1018 protons.
The SI unit of electric current is the ampere. While it is an SI base unit, it can also be considered to be a combined unit, coulombs per 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.
it is defind as the amount of work done to bring a unit positive charge from infinity to that point in the electric feild it is devoted by V .: electric potential = workdone/charge V=w/q si unit is v
The coulomb is an SI derived unit used to measure electric charge. It is a special name given to an 'ampere second', which are both SI base units.
The SI unit of charge is the coulomb. In the SI, this is NOT a "base unit"; it's a derived unit - 1 coulomb = 1 ampere x 1 second.
The unit for resistance is the Ohm.
The coulomb is the SI unit of measure of electric charge, equal to the quantity of electricity conveyed in one second by a current of one ampere.
coulombs 1 coulomb is equal to the charge of 6.24 x 10^18 electrons