Physics, asked by Karanbhutna8532, 1 year ago

How many electrons constitute one column of negative charge?

Answers

Answered by Vaibhavverma73
1

Hey mate!

I am here with your answer!

A single electron has a charge of 1.60217733 × 10-19 Coulombs. A collection of 6.2415 × 1018 electrons has a charge of one Coulomb (1/1.60217733x10-19). 1.6 into 10 raise to power -19 no of electrons are present in one coulomb of charge.

Hope this will help you!

Answered by Anonymous
0

Given that

Charge (Q) = 1 C

Electron (e) = 1.6× 10^-19

Number of electron (n) = ?

Q= ne

1 C = n × 1.6×10^-19 C

n = 1/(1.6×10^-19)

n = 6.25 × 10^18 electron

Similar questions