That is called an Ampere. By the way, in the SI the Ampere is defined as a base unit; the Coulomb is the derived unit.
One coulomb per second is defined as an ampere (A), which is the unit of electric current. It represents the flow of one coulomb of electric charge per second in a circuit.
The base unit of electric current flow is the Ampere, symbolized as A. It is defined as the flow of one Coulomb of charge per second.
The unit of current intensity is the ampere (A), which is defined as the flow of one coulomb of charge per second in a circuit.
A coulomb is the charge caused by a constant current of one ampere (what current is measured in) in one second.
1 ampere is one Coulomb per second or 6.25E18 electrons per second.
An ampere is a unit of electric current, representing the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit. A coulomb is a unit of electric charge, representing the quantity of charge passing through a point in a circuit. They are related in that 1 ampere is equal to 1 coulomb per second.
The unit of electrical current is Ampere, or 'Amps' for short.
The standard unit of electrical current flow is called the ampere, usually abbreviated to amp or the single letter A.More detailOne amp is equal to a flow of electrical charge over time of one coulomb per second.The standard unit of electrical charge is the coulomb.
Current is the flow of electrical charge, measured in amperes. One ampere is defined as one coulomb per second. One coulomb is about 6.24x1018 protons or electrons.A few more terms to crystallize things... Some people confuse current and voltage. They are not the same thing. Current, as stated above is a flow of charge, while voltage is the energy behind that charge, in volts, or joules per coulomb. Power is the rate of work done by the energy, in joules per second or watts, or volts times amperes. Energy, joules, is the integral of the power.
The basic unit of electric current is the ampere (A). It is defined as the flow of one coulomb of electric charge per second.
One coulomb is equal to the amount of electric charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second.
1A current produced when the charge of I coulomb flows in 1 second.The no. of electrons present in 1 coulomb is 1/1.6 x 10-19= .625 x 10-19 electrons.but no. of electrons cannot be in fractions. So, it is 6 x 1018 electrons.