How is electric charge measured?

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Electric charge is measured using instruments like electrometers, which can detect the presence of charge through the repulsion of leaves. The amount of charge can be quantified by converting it into a measurable property, such as the distance between leaves or voltage across a capacitor. A common method involves transferring charge to a known capacitor and using the formula Q = C x V to calculate the charge. Additionally, a vibrating switch can charge a capacitor from a battery and discharge it through a milliammeter, allowing for the calculation of transferred charge based on current readings. Understanding these techniques is essential for accurate measurement of electric charge.
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How do we measure the amount of charge body has. Can you tell me some instruments and how do they work.
Well i know how ampere is defined so one coloumb will be the current that flows in one second - but how can wemeasure that?
 
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Its good to test if charge is present as the leaves will repel but how do you measure the amount of charge?
Perhaps i don't understand -
 
More charge => more force between the leaves => larger distance between them

The basic idea is that you convert the measurement of the charge to a measurement of some other property - like the distance between the leaves, or a current somewhere, or an acceleration of particles or whatever.
 
one technique is to transfer the charge to a known capacitor then measure the voltage across the known capacitor. Then use Q = C x V to find Q.
An instrument designed to do this is called an electrometer.
If you want to measure the charge on a capacitor then a vibrating switch can be used to alternately charge the capacitor from a battery then discharge it through a milliammeter. If the frequency of switching is known then the chatge transferred at each switching can be calculated from the current read by the milliammeter.
 
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