approx equal to (2 x 10^(-4) to 0.01) x large ultracapacitor capacitance (100 to 5000 F)
Chat with our AI personalities
One farad is equal to one coulomb of electric charge stored per volt of potential difference across a capacitor. In simpler terms, a capacitor has a capacitance of one farad when it can store one coulomb of charge for every volt applied across it. This unit is named after the physicist Michael Faraday.
The prefix "p" means "pico" - a millionth of a millionth of something. Therefore, 100 pF is 100 x 10-12 Farad, equal to 10-10 Farad. Since a Farad is, for most practical purposes, an extremely large unit, prefixes like micro, nano and even pico are often used with it.
c=Q/v and v=IR SO C=Q/IR I=Q/T SO C=QT/QR Q CANCELS SO C=T/R AND R MULTIPLY BY C =T SO FARAD MULTIPLY OHM =SECOND
second squared !
That is equal to 500(1 + 500) / 2.That is equal to 500(1 + 500) / 2.That is equal to 500(1 + 500) / 2.That is equal to 500(1 + 500) / 2.