Constans Coulombiana,[1] vel constans roboris electricae,[2] vel constans electrostatica[3] (ke vel k vel K notata) est constans proportionalitatis in aequationibus electrostaticae(en)(d) adhibita.[4] Nomen in honorem physici Francogallici Caroli de Coulomb (17361806) electum est, qui legem Coulombianam(d)(en) anno 1785 invenit.[5]

Secundum unitates primarias Systematis internationalis unitatum, constanti Coulombianae congruunt 8.9875517923(14)×109 kgm3s−4A−2.[6]

Secundum nonnulla systemata unitatum naturalium(en)(d) (e.g. secundum unitates Stoneyanas, secundum unitates Planckianas), constans Coulombiana partem numeralem habet unius – i.e.: ke = 1 lS3mStS−2qS−2 = 1 lP3mPtP−2qP−2 = …

Aequationes quae constante Coulombiana utuntur recensere

Lex Coulombiana(d)(en)
 
Energia electrica potentialis(en)(d)
 
Campus electricus
 

Notae recensere

  1. Cleri, Fabrizio (2016). The Physics of Living Systems. Springer International Publishing. p. 611. ISBN 9783319306476 
  2. Oxford, Cambridge and RSA Examinations (2010). Data, Formulae and Relationships Booklet (Revised Version 2.2) – GCE Advanced Level and Advanced Subsidiary – Physics B (Advancing Physics). p. 2 
  3. Milne, Edward Arthur (6 Martii 1937). "Letters to Editor: The Constant of Gravitation". Nature 139 (3514): 409 
  4. Coulomb force. . Encyclopedia Britannica 
  5. Charles-Augustin de Coulomb. . Encyclopedia Britannica 
  6. Pars numeralis e ke = 14πε0 ducitur – "2018 CODATA Value: vacuum electric permittivity". The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty. NIST. 20 Maii 2019 

Nexus interni

 

Haec stipula ad physicam spectat. Amplifica, si potes!