(14 N x 6 m) = 84 newton-meters = 84 joules
You can't convert them directly, because they measure different things. The unit for energy is the Joule. Power means how fast energy is transferred; it is measured in Joules/second, also called Watts.
360 joules
Electric Potential = Electrical Potential Energy/ Charge The measurement for electric potential is call the volt. Electrical Potential is often called voltage. Voltage or Electrical Potential = 0.5 Joules / .0001 Coloumb = 5000
Electron flow is current, or coulombs per second. Electron potential is voltage or joules per second.
Voltage is electromotive force, in joules per coulomb. Power is energy transfer rate in joules per second, also known as watts.Not asked, but answered for completeness sake, and also to show the relationship between voltage and power, current is charge transfer rate in coulombs per second. So, if you multiply voltage (joules per coulomb) by amperes (joules per second) you get watts (joules per second).
calulate the voltage of a battery that provides 20 joules of energy to every 5 coulombs of charge
the basic unit of voltage is watts
(14 N x 6 m) = 84 newton-meters = 84 joules
Voltage is "electrical pressure", so to speak, or energy per charge. Volts is joules per coulomb.
You can't convert them directly, because they measure different things. The unit for energy is the Joule. Power means how fast energy is transferred; it is measured in Joules/second, also called Watts.
25*80 = 2000 JOULES
Voltage is electrical pressure and Joules is a power rating so other info is needed
Joules (energy) are not equivalent to Watts (power).If something converts 6 Joules every second, it is 6 Watts. If it takes ten seconds to convert 6 Joules, its power is 0.6 Watts.Multiply the Watts by the seconds to find the Joules.CommentYou do not 'consume' power. Power is simply a rate; you cannot consume a rate! You consume energy; the rate at which you consume it is power.
Voltage is simply electrical potential. You do not have to have current to have voltage, but you have to have both voltage and current in order to have power transfer.Voltage = joules per coulombCurrent = coulombs per secondWatts = Voltage times current = joules per secondAnswer'Voltage' is a synonym for 'potential difference', not potential. A potential difference exists between two points which are at different potentials due to an imbalance of their electrical charges.
Non-reactive power (watts) is current times voltage, so P = IV. Dimensionally, current is coulombs per second, voltage is joules per coulomb, so current times voltage is joules per second, which is the same as power in watts.
10 voltage