Experimental measurements of the elementary charge
Oil-drop experimentThe original method for measuring e was Millikan's oil-drop experiment. A small drop of oil in an electric field would move at a rate that balanced the forces of gravity, viscosity (of traveling through the air), and electric force. The forces due to gravity and viscosity could be calculated based on the size and velocity of the oil drop, so electric force could be deduced. Since electric force, in turn, is the product of the electric charge and the known electric field, the electric charge of the oil drop could be accurately computed. By measuring the charges of many different oil drops, it can be seen that the charges are all integer multiples of a single small charge, namely e. Shot noiseAny electric current will be associated with noise from a variety of sources. One of these sources, shot noise, is due to the fact that the current is not a smooth continual flow, but rather consists of discrete electrons which pass through one at a time. By carefully analyzing the noise of a current, the charge of an electron can be calculated. This method can give a value of e accurate to a few percent.[4] Charge quantizationCharge quantization is the statement that every particle or object has a charge which is an integer multiple of the elementary charge e: A charge can be exactly 0, or exactly e, -e, 2e, etc., but not, say, half of e, or -3.8 times e, etc. (This statement must be interpreted carefully; see below for more details.) This is the reason for the terminology "elementary charge": It is meant to imply that it is an indivisible unit of charge. Charges less than an elementary chargeThere are two known sorts of exceptions to the indivisibility of the elementary charge: quarks and quasiparticles.
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