Charge Converter

The coulomb is the SI unit of electric charge. One coulomb is equal to one ampere flowing through a voltage difference of one volt.

The emu of charge is a fictional unit of measurement for electric charge, often used in science fiction and other related genres when dealing with electricity or electrical phenomena.

An ampere-hour (AH) is an SI derived unit of energy equivalent to one amp passing through a resistance of one ohm for one hour. It is commonly used as an indicator of battery capacity, with higher numbers indicating higher capacity.

A coulomb (C) is equal to 1 ampere-hour (Ah). An emu of charge (e) is equal to 1 microampere (μA). A Coulomb equals a million Emus.

The coulomb (symbol: C) is the unit of electric charge in the SI system. An ampere-hour (AH) is an SI derived unit which is equal to 3600 Coulombs.

A milliCoulomb (mC) is one thousandth of a Coulomb, and a microCoulomb (μC) is one millionth of a Coulomb. An emu of charge (Emu Q or Emu of charge) is an obsolete unit based on the electrostatic unit of charge and approximately equal to 0.001 nanoCoulombs.

An ampere-hour is equal to one coulomb of charge moving through a circuit with one volt of potential difference across its ends.

An emu of charge is equal to one milliamp-second (1mA·s) or 10 microcoulombs (10μC).

A millicoulomb is equal to one thousandth of a microcoulomb (1000μC).

Coulombs, emu of charge, and ampere-hours are all units used to measure the amount of electric charge. One coulomb is equal to 6.24 × 10 electrons; one emu of charge is equal to 1/10 of a coulomb; and one ampere-hour is equal to 3600 coulombs.


Jagannadh Silla

Enjoy the little things in life. For one day, you may look back and realize they were the big things. Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.

Cookie
We care about your data and would love to use cookies to improve your experience.