The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
The SI unit of Coulomb's constant is Nm^2/C^2 (Newton meter squared per coulomb squared).
The unit of the constant of proportionality in Coulomb's law is Nm²/C² or Vm.
Coulomb is a unit of electric charge while Faraday is a unit of electric charge quantity present in one mole of electrons. One Coulomb is equal to one Faraday constant, which is approximately 96,485 coulombs.
The unit for charge is the coulomb, which is equal to 1 A s (ampere times second).
This is not a proper question. What is 'it' referring to?
The SI unit of Coulomb's constant is Nm^2/C^2 (Newton meter squared per coulomb squared).
The unit of the constant of proportionality in Coulomb's law is Nm²/C² or Vm.
Coulomb is a unit of electric charge while Faraday is a unit of electric charge quantity present in one mole of electrons. One Coulomb is equal to one Faraday constant, which is approximately 96,485 coulombs.
The unit for charge is the coulomb, which is equal to 1 A s (ampere times second).
This is not a proper question. What is 'it' referring to?
The biggest unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C), which is equivalent to the charge transported by a constant current of one ampere in one second.
coulomb is the unit of charge and ampere is unit of current
The coulomb. It is the charge transported by 1 ampere of current in 1 second.
The SI unit of charge is the coulomb. In the SI, this is NOT a "base unit"; it's a derived unit - 1 coulomb = 1 ampere x 1 second.
A coulomb is the SI unit of an electrical charge so a hundredth of a coulomb would be 1% of that unit.
The coulomb is the SI unit of measure of electric charge, equal to the quantity of electricity conveyed in one second by a current of one ampere.
The Coulomb. If 1 Coulomb is transmitted per second this is 1 Ampere