The smallest charge ever recognized is the charge of an electron, and it is equivalent to 1/94690 fraction of a coulomb.
The smallest unit of positive charge is called a proton. It is found in the nucleus of an atom and carries a positive electric charge.
The smallest unit of electric charge that occurs in ordinary matter is the charge of an electron, which is approximately -1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs.
The smallest charge that can exist in a body is the elementary charge, which is approximately equal to 1.6 x 10^-19 coulombs. This charge is carried by fundamental particles such as protons and electrons, and is considered the smallest unit of electric charge.
The Planck charge is a fundamental unit of electric charge in quantum physics. It is significant because it represents the smallest possible amount of charge that can exist in the universe according to the Planck constant. This concept helps scientists understand the fundamental nature of charge and its interactions at the smallest scales of the universe.
The smallest unit of electric charge is the charge on an electron. It's not possible to split that amount of charge in pieces. -- 6,241,509,752,000,000,000 of them make 1 coulomb of charge. -- When that many of them flow through your ammeter every second, the meter reads 1 Ampere of current. -- It takes 1 joule of energy to lift that many of them through 1 volt of potential difference. When you let the same number fall down through the volt, they give back the joule. -- The proton has the same amount of charge, but it has opposite polarity. Whatever that really means.
The smallest unit is a quark. I'm not sure what you mean by 'of classification'
If it is a molecular compound, the smallest unit is called a molecule. If it is an ionic compound, the smallest unit is called a formula unit.
Alyssa Carney is the smallest unit of mass.
A molecule is a compounds smallest unit
This smallest unit is the atom.
A cell is the smallest unit of an organism
Smallest unit of a compound is a molecule.