Elementary electric charge | |
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Definition: | Charge of a proton |
Symbol | e or sometimes q |
Value in coulombs: | 1766208(98)×10−19 C 1.602 |
Elementary charge (as a unit of charge) | |
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Unit system | Atomic units |
Unit of | electric charge |
Symbol | e or q |
Unit conversions | |
1 e or q in ... | ... is equal to ... |
coulomb | 1766208(98)×10−19 1.602 |
statcoulomb | 20425(10)×10−10 4.803 |
HEP: √(ℏc) | 0.30282212088 |
The elementary charge, usually denoted as e or sometimes q, is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the magnitude of the electric charge carried by a single electron, which has charge −e. This elementary charge is a fundamental physical constant. To avoid confusion over its sign, e is sometimes called the elementary positive charge. This charge has a measured value of approximately 1766208(98)×10−19 1.602coulombs, or in cgs units, 20425(10)×10−10 statcoulombs. 4.803
The magnitude of the elementary charge was first measured in Robert A. Millikan's noted oil drop experiment in 1909.
In some natural unit systems, such as the system of atomic units, e functions as the unit of electric charge, that is e is equal to 1 e in those unit systems. The use of elementary charge as a unit was promoted by George Johnstone Stoney in 1874 for the first system of natural units, called Stoney units. Later, he proposed the name electron for this unit. At the time, the particle we now call the electron was not yet discovered and the difference between the particle electron and the unit of charge electron was still blurred. Later, the name electron was assigned to the particle and the unit of charge e lost its name. However, the unit of energy electronvolt reminds us that the elementary charge was once called electron.