capacitance unit
A capacitor labeled with a capacitance unit is connected in a simple circuit diagram.
Noun: A capacitance unit is a standard measure of the capacity of a circuit component, such as a capacitor, to store an electric charge. It quantifies capacitance, which is the ratio of the change in electric charge to the corresponding change in electric potential.
The term is used in physics and electrical engineering to specify the magnitude of capacitance. It is a unit of measurement. * The capacitance unit for the International System of Units (SI) is the farad. * When designing the filter, the engineer selected a capacitor with a value of several microfarads, a common capacitance unit for such applications.
- In Context: The term is typically used when discussing the specifications, standards, or comparisons of capacitive components. For example: "The component's value is given in standard capacitance units."
- Farad (F): The SI derived unit of capacitance. One farad is defined as one coulomb per volt.
- Microfarad (µF): A subunit equal to one millionth (10⁻⁶) of a farad.
- Picofarad (pF): A subunit equal to one trillionth (10⁻¹²) of a farad.
- Capacitance: The physical property that a capacitance unit measures.
- Unit of capacitance
- Inductance unit: A measure of a component's ability to store energy in a magnetic field.
- Resistance unit: A measure of a component's opposition to the flow of electric current.
A capacitor labeled with a capacitance unit is connected in a simple circuit diagram.
- a measure of the capacity of a circuit component to store charge