The formula to find velocity is: V = D. (VELOCITY equals distance divided by time)
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One joule is equal to one coulomb of charge multiplied by one volt of electric potential difference. Therefore, one joule is equivalent to one coulomb of charge.
In an electrical system where current is equal to the charge multiplied by the velocity, the relationship is that the current flowing through the system is directly proportional to both the amount of charge and the velocity at which the charge is moving. This means that as either the charge or the velocity increases, the current flowing through the system will also increase.
That depends on the exact situation. If there is an interaction with other charges, this can cause the object to acceleration (basically, change its velocity), and the greater the object's charge, the faster its velocity will change.
The magnitude of drift velocity is small because it represents the average velocity of charge carriers in a material experiencing an electric field. The individual charge carriers move at high speeds, but they collide frequently with atoms in the material, leading to a net low average velocity. The drift velocity is proportional to the strength of the electric field and inversely proportional to the charge carrier's mobility and the charge density.
That depends on the voltage. In general, a coulomb of charge will either gain or lose (depending on the direction) one joule of energy for every volt of potential difference. For example, if the battery has 12 V, a coulomb of charge will gain or lose 12 joules of energy when going from one terminal to the other.
one coulomb * one volt = one Joule So the potential difference is one volt.
One joule is equal to one coulomb of charge multiplied by one volt of electric potential difference. Therefore, one joule is equivalent to one coulomb of charge.
To find the acceleration of an object moving in a straight line, you must calculate the change in velocity during a unit of time. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity over time, not distance. It is given by the formula acceleration = (final velocity - initial velocity) / time.
In an electrical system where current is equal to the charge multiplied by the velocity, the relationship is that the current flowing through the system is directly proportional to both the amount of charge and the velocity at which the charge is moving. This means that as either the charge or the velocity increases, the current flowing through the system will also increase.
A joule is a unit of energy, so you will find joules wherever there is energy.
A joule is a unit of energy. A volt is an electrical unit of voltage (sometimes called electromotive force). 1 joule = (1 Coulomb of electric charge) x (1 volt). A Coulomb of charge is the charge equivalent of 6.242 x 1018 electrons.
That depends on the exact situation. If there is an interaction with other charges, this can cause the object to acceleration (basically, change its velocity), and the greater the object's charge, the faster its velocity will change.
No, Coloumb is the unit of charge. The SI unit of energy is Joule.
The magnitude of drift velocity is small because it represents the average velocity of charge carriers in a material experiencing an electric field. The individual charge carriers move at high speeds, but they collide frequently with atoms in the material, leading to a net low average velocity. The drift velocity is proportional to the strength of the electric field and inversely proportional to the charge carrier's mobility and the charge density.
A joule/coulomb is represented by the volt. Example: a 9v battery provides 9 joules of energy to every coulomb of charge that passes through it.
That depends on the voltage. In general, a coulomb of charge will either gain or lose (depending on the direction) one joule of energy for every volt of potential difference. For example, if the battery has 12 V, a coulomb of charge will gain or lose 12 joules of energy when going from one terminal to the other.
Yes, the magnetic force on an electric charge is perpendicular to both the velocity of the charge and the direction of the magnetic field. This is known as the right-hand rule for determining the direction of the magnetic force on a moving charge.