Statcoulomb: Difference between revisions

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(New page: {{subpages}} In physics, a '''statcoulomb''' is the unit of electric charge in the cgs-esu (centimeter-gram-second electrostatic system) of units. A point charge has magnitude one st...)
 
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In [[physics]], a '''statcoulomb'''  is the unit of electric charge in the  cgs-esu (centimeter-gram-second electrostatic system) of units. A point charge has magnitude one statcoulomb, if it repels a point charge of equal magnitude at a distance of 1 centimeter with a force of one dyne. One  statcoulomb is 10/''c'' coulomb, where the [[coulomb]] is the [[SI]] unit of charge and ''c'' is the cgs speed of light (''c'' &asymp; 3&sdot;10<sup>10</sup> cm/s).
In [[physics]], a '''statcoulomb'''  (statC) is the unit of electric charge in the  cgs-esu (centimeter-gram-second electrostatic system) of units. A point charge has magnitude one statcoulomb, if it repels a point charge of equal magnitude at a distance of 1 centimeter with a force of one dyne. One  statcoulomb is 10/''c'' coulomb, where the [[coulomb]] is the [[SI]] unit of charge and ''c'' is the cgs speed of light (''c'' &asymp; 3&sdot;10<sup>10</sup> cm/s).

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In physics, a statcoulomb (statC) is the unit of electric charge in the cgs-esu (centimeter-gram-second electrostatic system) of units. A point charge has magnitude one statcoulomb, if it repels a point charge of equal magnitude at a distance of 1 centimeter with a force of one dyne. One statcoulomb is 10/c coulomb, where the coulomb is the SI unit of charge and c is the cgs speed of light (c ≈ 3⋅1010 cm/s).