To find volts from joules, you need to know the amount of charge in coulombs. The formula is ( V = \frac{E}{Q} ), where ( V ) is voltage in volts, ( E ) is energy in joules, and ( Q ) is charge in coulombs. Without the value of the charge, it's impossible to determine the voltage from 2775 joules alone. If you provide the charge, I can help calculate the voltage.
25*80 = 2000 JOULES
It takes 31.5 joules for 12 volts to move 2.5 coulombs. Volts is joules per coulomb. The rest is just algebra, i.e. joules is coulombs times volts, 2.5 times 12 is 31.5.
Power=Volts x Amps Unit for power is watts
This is not a valid question by itself. Joules are units of energy, while Amps are units of electrical current. However, if you also know the Voltage of the electrical current, you can multiply the Current[Amps]*Voltage[Volts] to get the Power in Watts. Watts are equivalent to Joules per second. If you then know the amount of time of the current flow, you can calculate the total number of Joules by multiplying the Power[Watts]*Time[seconds] = Energy[Joules] .
No way of telling. to get amps you have to have a current flow, which you get when you connect a consumer to an outlet. Then the consumer will pull amps according to its wattage rating (Watts / Volts = amps) - assuming it's all hooked to a fuse with enough rating.
It had better be in joules. Watts and volts are not units of energy. yes, but how many as in ? joules/sec
There is no direct conversion between volts and joules as they are different units measuring different quantities. Volts measure electric potential difference while joules measure energy.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts
The AED delivers a shock energy, with units of joules (see the related link). There is not a direct conversion from joules to volts. I have read that the AED has the capability of about 1000 volts. For a comparison of some AEDs and their energy output, see the other related link. An AED with child pads delivers less energy per shock; as low as 50 joules whereas some for an adult will deliver 360 joules or 400 joules.
There is no direct conversion between Joules and Volts because they are different units. Joules measure energy, while Volts measure electrical potential. However, if you know the resistance in ohms, you can use the formula: Power (in Watts) = Current (in Amperes) x Voltage (in Volts).
1 eV is 1.6x10-19 Joules. So, 1 Joule is 1 / 1.6x10-19 eV
25*80 = 2000 JOULES
Could be a lot if the amount of charge is low as in static electricity.
3.5% of 2,775= 3.5% * 2775= 0.035 * 2775= 97.125
Joules is equivalent to power over time. Power is equivalent to volts times current, so your question does not provide enough information to answer. To look at another way - you might ask how many joules (a measure of energy like kWh - what your electric company bills you on) are in 120 volts. If this were not dependent on current, then you would be constantly billed for every outlet in your home, regardless of whether they are in use. The fact that 120 volts is present at all outlets at all times does not mean that power is being used at all times.
It takes 31.5 joules for 12 volts to move 2.5 coulombs. Volts is joules per coulomb. The rest is just algebra, i.e. joules is coulombs times volts, 2.5 times 12 is 31.5.
You can't calculate how many volts with that information; you could calculate the energy - 60 watts for 15 minutes is equivalent to 54,000 joules.