The formula to find velocity is: V = D. (VELOCITY equals distance divided by time)
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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.
I think you mean the "rate of CHANGE" of velocity. (If you don't, then the question is meaningless.) The rate of change of velocity is called " acceleration ".
Unit of strain energy is newton.meter or joule
When you combine 2 velocities that are in the same directions, add them together to find the resultant velocity. When you combine 2 velocities that are in opposite directions, subtract the smaller velocity from the larger velocity to find the resultant velocity.
By definition a volt is a joule per coulomb, V=W/Q (V is voltage, W is work done or energy measured in joules, Q is charge measured in coulombs) therefore 1 volt is 1 joule per 1 coulomb of charge (1C of charge is a very large amount to expect to see very small numbers for charge)
one coulomb * one volt = one Joule So the potential difference is one volt.
You calculate the charge in velocity, not in distance.
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.
No, Coloumb is the unit of charge. The SI unit of energy is Joule.
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.
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.
The consistent unit system is MKS (Meter Kilogram Second). Velocity is in meters/second.
I think you mean the "rate of CHANGE" of velocity. (If you don't, then the question is meaningless.) The rate of change of velocity is called " acceleration ".
Unit of strain energy is newton.meter or joule
When you combine 2 velocities that are in the same directions, add them together to find the resultant velocity. When you combine 2 velocities that are in opposite directions, subtract the smaller velocity from the larger velocity to find the resultant velocity.
When you combine 2 velocities that are in the same directions, add them together to find the resultant velocity. When you combine 2 velocities that are in opposite directions, subtract the smaller velocity from the larger velocity to find the resultant velocity.