By one of the following, or both:
Not enough information - it depends on the cell or battery. Power = voltage x current. Energy = power x time = voltage x current x time. The amount of current each of these can provide, and how long it can provide it, would depend on their corresponding sizes, and constructional details (such as, what materials they are made of). However, in many cases a battery with a larger voltage will also be bigger, and provide more total energy.
No, a fully charged battery does not weigh more than an empty battery. The weight of a battery remains the same regardless of its charge level.
Yes, a charged battery weighs slightly more than a discharged battery due to the additional mass of the stored electrical energy.
The current produced by a 1.5V flashlight cell would be lower than the current produced by a 12V car battery. This is because current is directly proportional to voltage in a circuit with constant resistance, following Ohm's Law (V = IR). Therefore, the higher voltage of the 12V car battery would result in a higher current compared to the 1.5V flashlight cell.
Yes, having two strong batteries will likely light a bulb brighter than just one battery. The combined voltage and current from the two batteries will provide more energy to the bulb, resulting in a brighter light.
yes more voltage
When the alternator starts charging the battery voltage will increase about two volts to charge the battery.
Higher acid / lower pH in limes
it doesnt a lime produce's more voltage than a lemon
A 9 volt battery is stronger than a 1.5 volt battery because it has a higher voltage. The higher voltage allows the 9 volt battery to power more demanding devices and last longer than a 1.5 volt battery.
the voltage of a battery could be larger than the emf if you are to charge the battery, in that case V=E+Ir .
To charge any battery the voltage of the input must be more than the battery's output.
If the 12 volt solar panel output voltage is always higher than the 6.5 watt battery voltage. To charge a battery, a voltage greater than the battery must be applied to the battery, otherwise the battery will try to charge the charger.
Check the battery voltage, bike not running. Start the bike (crank the rpm's up a little), voltage should be a couple of volts more than battery voltage. Check both voltage (running and not running) at battery terminals. Charge voltage isn't all though, if it doesn't stop charging when it should it will boil the battery dry. If you are having this symptom, it's for sure the regulator
Series.
More than likely a defective voltage regulator.
this question is missing information and therefor makes no sense