Elementary Charge

Longitudinal electric and transverse magnetic.
Elementary charge. The elementary charge is the electric charge carried by a single electron or proton. It is the reflected longitudinal displacement of a granule from equilibrium at the core of the particle a harmonic motion that appears as waves and measured correctly as a distance si unit of meters. An elementary charge is the magnitude of electric charge associated with a single electron. The coulomb is the unit of elementary charge in the international system of units.
Similar to time length or mass the elementary charge is a fundamental measurement of a fundamental physical constant. This elementary charge is a fundamental physical constant. The elementary charge usually denoted by e or sometimes q e is the electric charge carried by a single proton or equivalently the magnitude of the negative electric charge carried by a single electron which has charge 1 e. By convention electrons have negative minus charge and protons have positive plus charge.
An elementary charge is the electrical charge carried by a single electron. Elementary charge definition the unit of electric charge of which all free charges found in nature are integral multiples equal to 1 602 10 19 coulombs the charge of the proton. An apparently fundamental constant that is the smallest known quantity of electricity is either positive or negative as the positron or the electron and has a value of about 4 802 10 10 statcoulomb or 1 602 10 19 absolute coulomb.