Elementary Charge

The elementary charge (symbol e or sometimes q) is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the negative of the electric charge carried by a single electron. This is a fundamental physical constant and the unit of electric charge in the system of atomic units. It has a value of 1.602 176 462(63) 10-19 C. In the Centimetre gram second system of units, the value is approximately 4.80 10-10 statcoulombs. Since it was first measured in Robert Millikan's famous oil-drop experiment in 1909, the elementary charge has been considered indivisible. Quarks, first posited in the 1960s, are believed to have fractional electric charges (in units of e/3), but only to exist in particles with an integer charge. They have never been detected singly. In 1982 Robert Laughlin tried to explain the fractional quantum Hall (FQH) effect by predicting the existence of fractionally charged quasiparticles. In 1995 fractional charge of Laughlin quasiparticles has been measured directly in a quantum antidot electrometer at Stony Brook University (New York). In 1997, two groups of physicists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, and at the CEA laboratory near Paris, claimed to have detected such quasiparticles carrying an electric current.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
becan
catastrophism
pink squirrel
ishi
bo lundgren
security cracking
hartree energy
mayapan
quincunx
covert channel
functional predicate
cracker (biscuit)
atomic units
the go go's
bert
ernie
george grenville
reform party
silver maple
cabaret voltaire
charlie chaplin (singer)
sugar maple
motorola 68012
sugar minott
motorola 68008
ilm ar rijal
super bowl xxxvii
the bachelor
the bachelorette
bohr magneton
ossuary
karl mannheim
palestinian immigration (israel)
nuclear magneton
rukmini
cement mixer
simearth
internet software consortium
buddha
piano trio
new zealand electricity market
japanese calendar
cezzar ahmet
white on black color scheme