There seems to be a typo in your question. Coulomb is a unit of electric charge in the International System of Units (SI). It is named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, a French physicist. If you meant something else, please provide more context.
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).
The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
1 microcoulomb is the equivalent of a millionth of a coulomb.
This is not a proper question. What is 'it' referring to?
1 coulomb= 3*109 statcoulomb
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).
The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
He was famous for coulomb's law
Charles Augustin de coulomb discovered the coulomb's law in the 1780s. and limestone 1820
Coulomb discovered Coulomb's law in 1785 after a series of experiments relating to electromagnetism. He published the findings of his three reports in 1785.
Approximately 6.25E18 electrons in a Coulomb.
Saint-Coulomb's population is 2,454.
The Coulomb. If 1 Coulomb is transmitted per second this is 1 Ampere
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.
Here are a few: stat-ue; stat-ion; stat-e; and, stat-ic.