Physics, asked by goyaldinesh077, 8 months ago

how many electrons constitutes one coulomb of charge​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

Explanation:

 \fbox \pink {A}\fbox \blue {n} \fbox \purple {s} \fbox \green{w} \fbox \red {e} \fbox \orange {r}

One coulomb (C) of charge represents an excess or deficit of 6.24 x 1018 electrons. The quantity of charge (Q) on an object is equal to the number of elementary charges on the object (N) multiplied by the elementary charge (e)....

Answered by rtkgoyal
2

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. Total charge required for 1Coulomb. So 1 Columb of charge contains 6 × 1018 electrons.

please mark my answer as brilliant answer

Similar questions