Physics, asked by hemantkhorwal143, 4 months ago

Calculate the number of electrons constituting one coulomb of charge.​

Answers

Answered by aarti225566
1

Explanation:

One electron possesses a charge of 1.6 ×10-19C, i.e., 1.6 ×10-19C of charge is contained in 1 electron. Therefore, 6 x 1018 electrons constitute one coulomb of charge.

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Answered by shyamlic
0

Answer:

We know that the charge on an electron is negative and it is -1.6⨯10-19 coulomb.</p><p></p><p>We need to calculate the number of electrons constituting one coulomb of charge.</p><p></p><p>e = 1.6 × 10-19 C</p><p></p><p>Total charge required for 1Coulomb.</p><p></p><p>∴  q = 1C……….(1)</p><p></p><p>The formula to calculate the charge is</p><p></p><p>q = ne</p><p></p><p>where</p><p></p><p>q = charge</p><p></p><p>e = number of electrons</p><p></p><p>n = q/e……….(2)</p><p></p><p>Substituting equation (1) in equation (2) we get</p><p></p><p>n = 1/(1.6 × 10-19)</p><p></p><p>n = 6.25 × 1018 electrons ≅ 6 × 1018 electrons</p><p></p><p>So 1 Columb of charge contains 6 × 1018 electrons</p><p></p><p>

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