The quantity of electric charge stored in a capacitor is measured in

a

farad

b

ampere

c

coulomb

d

volt

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c

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Discussions (7)

Nelsonkalu
4 years ago

A is actually the correct answer and not C

jeffry_spxo
3 years ago

nice one its measured in farad

CyloveTruth
8 months ago

The quantity of electric charge stored in a capacitor is measured in **coulombs (C)**.

**Explanation:**

* The fundamental relationship for a capacitor is given by the formula:
**Q = C × V**
where:
* **Q** is the charge in **coulombs (C)**
* **C** is the capacitance in **farads (F)**
* **V** is the voltage across the capacitor in **volts (V)**

* One **coulomb** is a substantial amount of charge, equal to the charge of approximately 6.242 × 10¹⁸ electrons.

* In practical electronics, you will often see charge measured in smaller units like microcoulombs (µC) or nanocoulombs (nC) because the farad is a very large unit.

Chidera2107
1 year ago

the capacitance of a capacitor is the MEASURE of its ability to store charge measured in farad
but the electricity stored in measurde in columbs

MyMoriamm
1 year ago

It measured in faraday

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