Properties of Electric Charge
Electric charge, like mass and volume, is a physical property of matter. Its SI unit is known as the Coulomb (C), which represents 6.242×1018e, where e is the charge of a proton. Charges can be positive or negative; a singular proton has a charge of 1.602×10−19 C, while an electron has a charge of -1.602×10−19 C.
Invariance
Like mass, electric charge in a closed system is conserved. As long as a system is impermeable, the amount of charge inside it will neither increase nor decrease; it can only be transferred. However, electric charge differs from other properties—like mass—in that it is a relativistic invariant. That is, charge is independent of speed. The mass of a particle will rise exponentially as its speed approaches that of light, its charge, however, will remain constant.
The independence of electric charge from speed was proven through an experiment in which one fast-moving helium nucleus (two protons and two neutrons bound together) was proven to have the same charge as two separate, slow-moving deuterium nuclei (one proton and one neutron bound together in each nucleus).
Attraction and Repulsion
Electric charge is a property that produces forces that can attract or repel matter. Mass is similar, although it can only attract matter, not repel it. Still, the formula describing the interactions between charges is remarkably similar to that which characterizes the interactions between masses. For electric fields, the force (F) is related to the charges (q1, q2) and the distance (r) between them as:
where π and
Coulomb's Law
The forces (F1 and F2) sum to produce the total force, which is calculated by Coulomb's Law and is proportional to the product of the charges q1 and q2, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance (r21) between them.
The formula for gravitational force has exactly the same form as Coulomb's Law, but relates the product of two masses (rather than the charges) and uses a different constant. Both act in a vacuum and are central (depend only on distance between the forces) and conservative (independent of path taken). However, it should be noted that when comparing similar terms, charge-based interaction is substantially greater than that based on mass. For example, the electric repulsion between two electrons is about 1042 times stronger than their gravitational attraction.