NOVANET
i dont know the answer its either one of these
-base unit
-undefined unit
-unmeasurable unit
-derived unit
-customary unit
Current in amperes is coulombs per second, so 2 coulombs per second is 2 amperes.
Current
watts
J = ρ.u Where J = Current Density (Ampere per meter square) ρ = Charge Density (Coulombs per cubic meter) u = Particles average drift velocity (meters per second)
Electron current flow is measured in coulombs per second, which is known as amperes. A coulomb is about 6.242 × 1018 electrons.
Base unit delta current
A coulomb is the quantity of charge displaced by a one ampere per second.
Ratio of charge of electron to 60 will be the amt. Of current.
The ampere is the unit that measures current. The current is like a flow in a pipe or a river. Just like a flow could be liters or gallons per second, one ampere is 6.24 x1018 electrons passing per second.
Current is the amount of electrical charge that flows past a given point in a given time.Current is measured in Amperes, which is Coulombs per Second. Sometimes, erroneously, we use the term current to refer to voltage or power. Voltage is Joules per Coulomb. Power is Joules per Second, or Voltage times Current.
The unit for current is Ampère. The "per second" is already implied, since one Ampère is equal to one Coloumb per second, so current is charge per second. I don't believe "current per second" makes sense.
An electric current is the amount of electrons per unit time or seconds.
They describe completely different things.* Voltage: The energy required to move a unit charge between two points * Current: Roughly speaking, the amount of electrons that pass every second * Frequency: The number of cycles per second (for an alternating current) * Conductance: How easily a material will conduct electricity * Power: The amount of energy converted per second
Current is electrical charge flow, in coulombs per second. We simplify coulombs per second and call it amperes.
Current is the amount of electrical charge that flows past a given point in a given time. Current is measured in Amperes, which is Coulombs per Second. Sometimes, erroneously, we use the term current to refer to voltage or power. Voltage is Joules per Coulomb. Power is Joules per Second, or Voltage times Current.
current is the rate of flow of charge: colombs per second or amps voltage is the amount of energy in one colomb of charge: volt or jouls per colomb voltage times current is the power.
Current is coulombs per second.