Physics, asked by sweetykumary768, 11 days ago

Calculate the number of elements constituting one coulomb charge.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

We know that the charge on an electron is negative, and it is -1.6⨯10-19 coulomb.

We need to calculate the number of electrons constituting one coulomb of charge.

e = 1.6 × 10-19 C

Total charge required for 1Coulomb.

∴ q = 1C……….(1)

The formula to calculate the charge is

q = ne

where

q = charge

e = number of electrons

n = q/e……….(2)

Substituting equation (1) in equation (2), we get

n = 1/(1.6 × 10-19)

n = 6.25 × 1018 electrons ≅ 6 × 1018 electrons

So 1 Columb of charge contains 6 × 1018 electrons.

Answered by theerthatheetha
0

Explanation:

one electron passes a charge of 1.6x10-19C, I. e., 1.6x10-19C of charges is contained in one electron. therefore 6x1018 of electrons consistent one columb of charge.

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