There are several different universal constants: Avogadro's number, Gas constant, Gravitational constant. The question needs to be more specific.
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The answer depends on the value of E, which is not a universal constant.
The value of the universal gas constant, denoted as R, is determined based on experimental measurements and is considered a fundamental physical constant in the field of thermodynamics. Its value is approximately 8.31 J/mol·K.
Cavendish
8.314 J/mol K
G is called The universal gravitational constant because at any point of the universe the value of G is constant. G=6.67*10^-11 N m^2/kg^2...!!!!1
8.314 jul/mol/kalvin
G is the universal gravitational constant. It is basically a conversion factor to adjust the number and units so they come out to the correct value. This is a universal constant so it is true everywhere.
In SI units, the gas constant has a value of approximately 8.314 J / (mol x kelvin).
of course. that's why it's called the universal gas constant.
The value of universal gas constant in cgs is 1.985 calories per degree Celsius per mole