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
1 JOULE= 107
1 joule = 10 million ergs
One joule is 0.239 calories.
J is unit of energy, N is unit of force.So there is no Newtons in Joule. Newton*Displacement=Joule
1 eV is 1.6x10-19 Joules. So, 1 Joule is 1 / 1.6x10-19 eV
If you actually mean the unit of energy, Joule, then 1 Volt = 1 Joule/1 Coulomb, or 1 Joule = 1 Volt * 1 Coulomb
A joule is a unit of energy, while a volt is a unit of electric potential. The relationship between the two is defined by the equation: 1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb (V = J/C). Therefore, there isn't a direct conversion from joules to volts without knowing the amount of charge (in coulombs) involved.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts
1 JOULE= 107
0.00027777777777778 Wh1 Wh = 3600 Joule
1 joule = 10 million ergs
1 mega-anything = 1 million of them. 1 joule = 0.000001 megajoule
there is 5 lumen per hour in 1 joule
A joule is the work done by applying 1 watt of power for 1 second (J = W x Time in seconds). 1 Watt is 1 Amp at 1 Volt potential (W = Amps x Volts). 1 Amp is 1 coulomb of electrons flowing in a second. 1 coulomb is 6 241 509 629 152 650 000 electrons. Thus it would appear that there are 6,241,509,629,152,650,000 electrons in a joule, except that 1 Joule could be 2 watts for half a second (or 4 W for 0.25 seconds). Also 1 Watt could be 2 Amps and half a volt, or .01 Amps at 100 Volts! The question has no one answer, it has an infinity of possible answers unless more parameters are dictated.
One joule is 0.239 calories.
J is unit of energy, N is unit of force.So there is no Newtons in Joule. Newton*Displacement=Joule