Electron current flow is measured in coulombs per second, which is known as amperes.
A coulomb is about 6.242 × 1018 electrons.
unit used for electric current is ampere
the symbol of current density is 'J'. & its unit is (Amp/m^2)
An ampere is the unit of (electrical) current.
NOVANET i dont know the answer its either one of these -base unit -undefined unit -unmeasurable unit -derived unit -customary unit
Hz is a unit of frequency. mA is a sub-unit of current. The two are not related.
It is not true that when electric current flows through a long conductor each electron moves through a relative short distance because electric current is the continues flow of electrons.
current is the amount of electron charge passing a point in a conductor per unit of time.Its unit is ampere
Electron flow is known as 'current' the unit of current is an amp
Electron flow is known as current. SI unit is Ampere
That's the electrical current, also known simply as "current". The SI unit for current is the ampere.
Power
Electron flow, or just current. The more electrons flowing per second, the higher the current.
the flowing in the conductor is related as given by the relation... I=Vena v=drift velocity of electron e=charge on electron n=concentration of electron in the current carrying conductor . a=area
I think you should rephrase your question. there's no example of an electron, an electron is an electron. the description of an electron is something like: an electron is the smallest unit of matter that has a negative charge. this charge is 1.602 x 10-19 C. it can be found in the electron cloud surrounding the nucleus of an atom. electric current is the directional movement of electrons in a conductive metal.
1.6x10^19 amperes is the amount of current that a flow of an electron will contain.
Current is the term for electron movement.
Vibrator
Free electrons and ions can carry current.