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coulombThe SI unit of electric charge, equal to the amount of charge delivered by a current of 1 ampere running for 1 second. One mole of electrons has a charge of about 96487 C.
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coulombCoulomb (abbreviated C) is the standard measure of electrical charge. Named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, it is the amount of charge accumulated on a one-farad capacitor charged to one volt; or the amount of charge transported by a one ampere current in one second.
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coulomb1881, named for French chemist Charles-Augustin de Coulomb (1736-1806), who devised a method of measuring electrical quantity. It is the quantity of electricity conveyed in 1 second by a current of 1 [..]
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coulombThe coulomb is a derived SI unit of electrical charge. A coulomb is amount of charge moved by a electric current of one ampere in one second. The symbol for coulomb is a capital C.Examples: An electron carries a charge of -1.6 x 10-19 coulombs.
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coulombThe quantity of electricity on the positive plate of a capacitor of 1 Farad capacitance when the potential difference across the plates is 1 V.
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coulombThe unit of electric charge, equal to one ampere-second (A·s).
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coulombThe quantity of electricity equal to the charge on 6.25 x 1018 electrons.
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coulombUnit used to measure quantity of electric charge; equivalent to the charge resulting from the transfer of 6.24 billion particles such as the electron
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coulombthe international system (SI) unit of electric charge. A coulomb is the quantity of charge passing a cross section of conductor in one second when the current is one ampere. Criticality: a fission pro [..]
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coulombThe coulomb is the SI Unit of electrical charge. It can be defined as the amount of charge which flows in 1 second due to a current of 1 ampere.
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coulombUE, EL The coulomb is the SI Unit of electrical charge. It can be defined as the amount of charge which flows in 1 second due to a current of 1 ampere.
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coulomb(n) a unit of electrical charge equal to the amount of charge transferred by a current of 1 ampere in 1 second(n) French physicist famous for his discoveries in the field of electricity and magnetism; [..]
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coulomb - A unit of electric charge in SI units (International System of Units). A Coulomb is the quantity of electric charge that passes any crossection of a conductor in one second when the current is maintained constant at one ampere.
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coulombthe SI unit of charge, symbol C, named after Charles Augustin Coulomb (1736 - 1806) who formulated the law of interaction between charged particles. A coulomb of separated charge is a huge quantity.
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coulombThe combined negative electrical charge of 6.24 X 1018 electrons.
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coulombThe quantity of charge transferred by one ampere in one second between two points in a circuit.
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coulombA quantity of electricity transferred by a current of one ampere in one second.
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coulombA unit of electric charge. One coulomb (1C) is equal to the charge transferred by a current of one ampere in one second.
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coulombthe practical unit of electric charge transmitted by a current of one ampere for one second. It is the charge carried by 6.2418 x 1018 electrons. Named for the French physicist Charles A. de Coulomb 1 [..]
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coulomb Base unit of electrical charge equal to 6.25 X 1018 electrons. Named for Charles Coulomb, the French physicist who pioneered research into magnetism and electricity. He also formulated Coulomb's law which states that the force of attraction or repulsion between two charged bodies is equal to the product of the two charges and is inverse [..]
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coulombThe standard unit of electric charge, named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, a French physicist who developed Coulomb's law. A coulomb is equal to the charge transported in 1 second by 1 ampere.
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coulombThe unit of electrical charge; equivalent to the charge of 6.28 x 1023 electrons.
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coulombAn amount of electrical charge which contains 6.24 x 1018 of electrons. So there!
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coulombthe quantity of electricity involved when a current of one ampere flows for one second.
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coulombAn Amp(ere) of current is what you get one one Coulomb worth of electric charge flows past a point in one second - i.e., 1 A = 1 C/s. One mole of electrons has a charge of 96 500 C, which is called a Farad.
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coulombA measurement of the amount of electrical charge carried by an electric current of one ampere in one second. One coulomb equals about 6.25 x 1018 electrons (6,250,000,000,000,000,000 electrons).
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coulombA unit of electrical charge which is equal to 1 ampere-second.
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coulombUnit of electric charge. A negative coulomb charge consists of 6.24 × 1018 electrons.
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coulombA measure of the quantity of electricity. One coulomb is equal to 6.28 x 1018 electrons.
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coulomb
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