A coulomb is bigger. Please also note that a coulomb is defined as a POSITIVE charge, while an electron has a NEGATIVE charge. Anyway, the magnitude of a coulomb is much bigger than that of an electron.
Electrons do have charge. The chare of an electron - 1.602*10-19 C
It is a fundamental assumption that each electron, proton and neutron is identical in mass and charge to every other particle of the same type. All electrons are identical, all protons, all neutrons.
The specific charge on an electron e equals 1.60210x10^-19 C.
The amount of charge in 1 Coulomb is exactly 1 Coulomb of charge. That's true whether the charge is positive or negative.
3.2 millicoulomb (1 coulomb/1000 millicoulomb)= 0.0032 coulomb--------------------------Charge on one electron sans negative sign...,1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb---------------------------so,0.0032 coulomb/1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb= 2.0 X 1016 electrons================
One Coulomb is the charge of about 6,241,510,000,000,000,000 electrons, so it looks likea Coulomb would probably be bigger than the charge on one electron.
the charge of 1 coulomb is the charge associated with 6.25 billion billion electrons
1 electron charge = 1.602 x 10-19 coulomb. The answer to the question is: about 16 percent of one billionth of one billionth of a coulomb.
no. IIRC it is the charge of 1 mole of electrons.
The charge of neutron is 0, as it is neutral. The charge of proton is 1.6x 10 to the power -19 coulomb. The charge of electron is -1.6x10 to the power -19 coulomb.
The charge of neutron is 0, as it is neutral. The charge of proton is 1.6x 10 to the power -19 coulomb. The charge of electron is -1.6x10 to the power -19 coulomb.
One coulomb is equal to the force of repulsion when a unit positive charge is placed from a similar charge at a distance of 1m.
The smallest charge ever recognized is the charge of an electron, and it is equivalent to 1/94690 fraction of a coulomb.
Electrons do have charge. The chare of an electron - 1.602*10-19 C
1.759 x 1011 Coulomb per Kilogram
No. That's 1/2 of the charge on one electron ... the quantum of charge.
Charge on electron = - 1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb, so..., - 58. 0 coulomb/- 1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb = 3.62 X 1020 electrons ===============