1 joule per coulomb = 1 volt
In SI, the 'volt' is a special name given to a joule per coulomb.
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 ampere is one of seven SI base units, and is defined in terms of the force it produces between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors. It is incorrect to say that an ampere is 'defined' as a coulomb per second, although it is certainly 'equivalent' to a coulomb per second.The coulomb is a SI derived unit, and is defined in terms of the ampere and the second. In fact, it is a special name given to an ampere second.
The metric unit used to determine electricity supply is called the Joule. The Joule is named after James Prescott Joule. When one wants to measure the power of the Joule, it gets measure in Watts. The Watt is named after James Watt. The Joule is a unit of energy. The unit of electric charge, or "quantity of electricity", is the Coulomb (named after French physicist Charles Augustin de Coulomb). One amp equals one coulomb per second.
The physical quantity that has the unit joule per coulomb is electric potential, which is measured in volts. Electric potential is a measure of the electric potential energy per unit charge at a point in an electric field.
This is not a proper question. What is 'it' referring to?
Volt is the unit of voltage.One volt is equal to 1 joule per coulomb:1 V = 1 J/C
Volt is the unit of voltage.One volt is equal to 1 joule per coulomb:1 V = 1 J/C
The unit of the Coulomb constant is Newton square meters per square Coulomb.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts
Please don't type "the following" if you don't provide a list. In any case, it is a volt.
Watts, volts and amps are units of measurement. Watt is the unit of measurement for power. 1 watt (W) = 1 joule (j) per second (s) (1 W = 1 j/s). Volt is the unit of measurement for voltage. 1 volt (V) = 1 joule per coulomb (c) (1 V = 1 j/c). Amp is the unit of measurement for current. 1 Amp (A) = 1 coulomb per second (1 A = 1 c/s).