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.
I am not sure what you mean with "force constant". The SI unit of force is the newton.
The unit of force in the Coulomb's law equation is the Newton (N).
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.
Coulombs for charge or Joules for heat capacity
The SI unit of electric current is the ampere. While it is an SI base unit, it can also be considered to be a combined unit, coulombs per second.
The unit of the constant of proportionality in Coulomb's law is Nm²/C² or Vm.
It is the fundamental measurement unit, in the SI system, for measuring electric charge.
I am not sure what you mean with "force constant". The SI unit of force is the newton.
The SI unit of electric charges is Coulombs (C), while the SI unit of electric potential is volts (V). Hence, the SI unit of EMI (Electromagnetic Induction) would be volts per second (V/s).
In the SI system the radiation constant (Stefan-Boltzmann constant) is measured in W/m2.K4.
The unit of force in the Coulomb's law equation is the Newton (N).
The CGS unit of charge is the statcoulomb, while the SI unit of charge is the coulomb. The relation between them is that 1 statcoulomb is equal to 3.33564 x 10^-10 coulombs.
SI and CGS unit of porosity is the constant between the molar fluxes. This is due to molecular diffusion and the gradient.
It is Newtons per metre.
It is m3kg-1s-2
unit of both gravitation and force is newton(N) if you mean gravitational constant the unit is-Nm^2/kg^2