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Electrical permittivityUnits Type

In electromagnetism, absolute permittivity is the measure of the resistance that is encountered when forming an electric field in a medium. In other words, permittivity is a measure of how an electric field affects, and is affected by, a dielectric medium. The permittivity of a medium describes how much electric field (more correctly, flux) is 'generated' per unit charge in that medium. More electric flux exists in a medium with a low permittivity (per unit charge) because of polarization effects. Permittivity is directly related to electric susceptibility, which is a measure of how easily a dielectric polarizes in response to an electric field. Thus, permittivity relates to a material's ability to resist an electric field and "permit" is a misnomer. In SI units, permittivity ? is measured in farads per meter (F/m)

Term

electricalPermittivity

Category

Electricity and Magnetism

Provenance

QUDT

Provenance Uri

http://qudt.org/vocab/quantity#Permittivity

Note

-

Default Unit

Farad per meter (F/m)

Dimension Symbol

L-3M-1T4I2

Dimension Length

0

Dimension Mass

-3

Dimension Time

-1

Dimension Current

4

Dimension Temperature

2

Dimension Amount

0

Dimension Light

0