1 statcoulomb is equal to 3.33564 x 10^-10 coulombs.
There are 10^18 stat coulombs in one coulomb. This conversion factor is used to relate the units of charge in the International System of Units (coulombs) to the units in the electrostatic cgs system (statcoulombs).
Please don't type "the following" if you don't provide a list. In any case, it is a volt.
1 microcoulomb is the equivalent of a millionth of a coulomb.
An ampere is a unit of electric current, representing the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit. A coulomb is a unit of electric charge, representing the quantity of charge passing through a point in a circuit. They are related in that 1 ampere is equal to 1 coulomb per second.
It takes 6.25E18 electrons to produce 1 coulomb of charge.
1 coulomb= 3*109 statcoulomb
That's the coulomb, equal to the quantity of charge moved by a current of 1 ampere during an interval of 1 second.
There are 10^18 stat coulombs in one coulomb. This conversion factor is used to relate the units of charge in the International System of Units (coulombs) to the units in the electrostatic cgs system (statcoulombs).
1 Coulomb is NOT equal to (6.3)18. It is, in fact 6.24 * 1018 atomic unit (r elementary charge).
Ampere, equal to 1 coulomb per second
One coulomb is equal to approximately (3 \times 10^9) electrostatic units (esu). The relationship between the two units arises from the definitions in the context of electrostatics. Specifically, 1 esu of charge is defined based on the force it exerts at a distance of one centimeter, while the coulomb is defined in the SI system.
Among other things, 1 ampere is equal to:1 coulomb / second1 volt / 1 ohmBasically, you can understand 1 ampere as a certain amount of electric charge (1 coulomb) flowing past a certain point per second (although in the SI, the definitions are the other way round: the coulomb is a unit derived from the ampere).
Please don't type "the following" if you don't provide a list. In any case, it is a volt.
1 microcoulomb is the equivalent of a millionth of a coulomb.
An ampere is a unit of electric current, representing the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit. A coulomb is a unit of electric charge, representing the quantity of charge passing through a point in a circuit. They are related in that 1 ampere is equal to 1 coulomb per second.
1 coulomb is the electric charge carried in 1 second by a current of 1 amp. 1 joule is the work done in one second at a power of 1 watt. So they are different things, with different dimensions, you can't equate them. To find the power caused by a flow of 1 coulomb you have to know the resistance of the circuit, the power in watts is then I2R.
It takes 6.25E18 electrons to produce 1 coulomb of charge.