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.
coulomb
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.
The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
the basic unit of voltage is watts
This is not a proper question. What is 'it' referring to?
coulomb is the unit of charge and ampere is unit of 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.
The SI unit of Coulomb's constant is Nm^2/C^2 (Newton meter squared per coulomb squared).
The coulomb. It is the charge transported by 1 ampere of current in 1 second.
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.
A coulomb is the SI unit of an electrical charge so a hundredth of a coulomb would be 1% of that unit.
The Coulomb. If 1 Coulomb is transmitted per second this is 1 Ampere