Electrons do have charge. The chare of an electron - 1.602*10-19 C
There are about 6.24 x 1018 electrons (or protons) in one coulomb of charge.
It takes 6.25E18 electrons to produce 1 coulomb of charge.
The charge of 96,481 electrons; approximately counted as either 96,490 or 96,500 as per convenience has a charge equivalent to a Coulomb.
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A coulomb is defined as a positive charge. 1 coulomb is the charge of 6.24 x 1018 protons. Multiply that by a million (106) for your question. However, the same number of electrons would have a charge of minus a million coulomb.
Approximately 6.25E18 electrons in a Coulomb.
There are about 6.24 x 1018 electrons (or protons) in one coulomb of charge.
It takes 6.25E18 electrons to produce 1 coulomb of charge.
The charge of 96,481 electrons; approximately counted as either 96,490 or 96,500 as per convenience has a charge equivalent to a Coulomb.
A coulomb is a measure of electric charge and is equal to -6.24151 x 10^18 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.
Charge on electron = - 1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb, so..., - 58. 0 coulomb/- 1.602 X 10 -19 coulomb = 3.62 X 1020 electrons ===============
The elementary charge ... the amount on one electron or one proton ... is 1.602 x 10-19 coulomb.So, in order to collect one coulomb, you'd need 6.242 x 1018 electrons or protons.(That's the number of electrons that pass by the middle of the wire every secondwhen the current in it is 1 Ampere.)
A coulomb is about 6.2 x 1018 electrons, so 100 coulombs is 100 times that. Since 100 is 102, we can find the product of two numbers that have the same base (the 10) and have exponents by just adding the exponents. 6.2 x 1018 x 102 = 6.2 x 1018+2 = 6.2 x 1020 electrons
6.24* 10^18
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the charge of 1 coulomb is the charge associated with 6.25 billion billion electrons