Statcoulomb: Difference between revisions

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In [[physics]], a '''statcoulomb'''  (statC), formerly known as '''esu''', 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.  
In [[physics]], a '''statcoulomb'''  (symbol '''statC'''), formerly known as '''esu of charge''', 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.  
:1 statC = 10/''c'' C,
:1 statC = C/(10⋅''c''),


where C ([[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).
where C ([[coulomb]]) is the [[SI]] unit of charge and ''c'' is the SI speed of light (''c'' &asymp; 3&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s).
 
The conversion of statC to C proceeds according to the following lines. We write
: 1 C = ''k'' statC,
and compute  ''k''. Consider two charges of 1 C each, 1 m apart, then the force between them is according to [[Coulomb's law]] in SI units,
:<math>
F = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0} = 10^{-7} c^2\quad \textrm{[N]}
</math>
(see [[magnetic constant]] for the SI value of  &epsilon;<sub>0</sub>).
The same system of two charges has in cgs units a force in dyne (1 dyn = 10<sup>&minus;5</sup> N):
:<math>
F' = \frac{k^2}{100^2}\; \Longrightarrow\; F' = 10^{-4} k^2\quad\textrm{[dyn]}\;\Longrightarrow\; F = 10^{-9}k^2\quad \textrm{[N]}
</math>
Hence
:<math>
10^{-9}k^2 = 10^{-7} c^2 \;\Longrightarrow\;k = 10 c.
</math>

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In physics, a statcoulomb (symbol statC), formerly known as esu of charge, 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.

1 statC = C/(10⋅c),

where C (coulomb) is the SI unit of charge and c is the SI speed of light (c ≈ 3⋅108 m/s).

The conversion of statC to C proceeds according to the following lines. We write

1 C = k statC,

and compute k. Consider two charges of 1 C each, 1 m apart, then the force between them is according to Coulomb's law in SI units,

(see magnetic constant for the SI value of ε0). The same system of two charges has in cgs units a force in dyne (1 dyn = 10−5 N):

Hence