each is a unit of measurement.
Coulomb is a measure of electric charge:One coulomb is the amount of electric charge transported in one second by a steady current of one ampere.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb
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1 newton= gram ? 1 newton=kilogram?
newton mean in concrete it is used for bearing for exemple mark
The deca Newton meter of torque is 0.1 to one Newton meter. In relation to the kilo meter of torque, it is .001. Many converters are available online for torque measurements.
Coulomb is a measure of electric charge:One coulomb is the amount of electric charge transported in one second by a steady current of one ampere.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb
Is a coulomb a measure of quantity whereas an ampere is a measure of rate?AnswerThe coulomb is the SI derived unit for electric charge. The ampere is the SI base unit for electric current.The coulomb is defined in terms of the ampere and the second. The ampere is defined in terms of the newton and the metre.
The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
All units can be decomposed into the fundamental units of mass, length, and time. Some would also add the fundamental unit of charge, which used to be the coulomb but is now, I think, the ampere1. For example, the watt is a joule per second; the joule is a newton-meter; the newton is a kilogram-meter squared per second squared2. You will have to do a similar decomposition of a Kelvin (or a degree Celsius or Fahrenheit). 1. The ampere was once defined as one coulomb per second. But now I think the coulomb is defined as an ampere-second. 2. The unit of force is the newton, F = ma, and the units for acceleration are meters per second squared.
The official definition is currently that one ampere is "the constant current that will produce an attractive force of 2 × 10-7 newton per metre of length between two straight, parallel conductors of infinite length and negligible circular cross section placed one metre apart in a vacuum". The coulomb (unit of charge) is derived from the ampere. To visualize electrical current, it is more convenient to think of it the other way - the coulomb is a certain number of charged particles (electrons, for example), and 1 ampere is 1 coulomb/second.
The SI unit of Coulomb's constant is Nm^2/C^2 (Newton meter squared per coulomb squared).
Newton for Mechanics and Faraday for Electricity.
The units of Coulomb's constant in the equation for the electrostatic force between two charged particles are Newton meters squared per Coulomb squared.
Coulomb's Law and Newton's Law of Gravity are both inverse square laws that describe the force between two objects. They both involve a proportionality constant that relates the force to the product of the masses (in Newton's Law) or charges (in Coulomb's Law) of the objects and the inverse square of the distance between them. Both laws are fundamental in understanding the interactions between objects in the universe.
Archimedes, Newton, Faraday and Buckminster Fuller
Newton, Gauss, Pascal, Ampere, Ohm are some.
Both have the concept of variation of force inversely with the square of the distance. But in case of coulomb we have electric charges and in case of newton's gravitation law we have masses. Coulomb's force can be either attractive and repulsive where as Newton's is only attractive