One statvolt is about 300 volts. (299.792458)
1 statvolt = 299.792458 volts
Zero volts equal one watt. Watts is the product of amps times volts. Without an amperage the voltage can not be calculated. The time constant has nothing to do with the equation.
1.602x10-13Joules of energy
none!
One breaker in the North American electrical system will supply 110 volts. Two adjacent tied breakers will produce 220 volts.
Answer: Volts x Amps = Watts This question lacks sufficient information for an answer. It isnt. One watt is equal to one Joule of energy per second. Amperage is current, or to state it more accurately, the amount of electrons passing through a point in a second.
One statvolt is about 299.8 volts.
Zero volts equal one watt. Watts is the product of amps times volts. Without an amperage the voltage can not be calculated. The time constant has nothing to do with the equation.
1 volt is equal to 0.01 hectovolt. Therefore, there are 100 volts in one hectovolt
It unit of capacitance is the centimeter, or one esu per statvolt.
1.602x10-13Joules of energy
One MeV is one megaelectron volts or one million electron volts, and the MeV is a measure of energy. It is equal to 1.60217646 × 10-13 joules.
(1,000,000,000) One billion volts.
none!
about 0.5 volts per potato (big one)
Unfortunately, the question as phrased is meaningless. A watt or kilowatt is a measure of voltage times current - one kilovolt at one amp of current dissipates one kilowatt of energy, but the same kilovolt at one tenth of an amp of current only dissipates 100 watts. Here's the formula: Watts = Volts * Amps
The watt is a measurement of work done by an object at constant velocity and under constant force. 1 watt, therefore, is equal to 1 Joule per second.
A "C" battery has a 1.5 Volts same with AAA, AA, and D batteries.