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).
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.
To calculate the power in watts, simply divide the energy in joules by the time taken to deliver that energy. If 200 joules of energy are delivered in 0.2 seconds during cardioversion, the power would be 200 Joules / 0.2 seconds = 1000 watts.
Power represents the rate at which work is done or energy is converted. In this case, a power of 200 joules means that 200 joules of energy is being transferred or converted every second.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts
Energy can be represented in other ways too. Ex. Volts, electron volts, calories
It had better be in joules. Watts and volts are not units of energy. yes, but how many as in ? joules/sec
Each fission of U235 releases 200 Mev (200 million electron volts) which in terms of Joules is 3.2 x 10-11 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.
To calculate the energy stored in a battery with volts and coulombs, you can use the formula: Energy (Joules) = Voltage (Volts) x Charge (Coulombs). Multiply the voltage by the charge of the battery to get the energy capacity in Joules.
200 per kilo
850 joules = 200 calories. 850 joules = 200 calories.
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.
200 joules
To calculate the power in watts, simply divide the energy in joules by the time taken to deliver that energy. If 200 joules of energy are delivered in 0.2 seconds during cardioversion, the power would be 200 Joules / 0.2 seconds = 1000 watts.
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.
Power represents the rate at which work is done or energy is converted. In this case, a power of 200 joules means that 200 joules of energy is being transferred or converted every second.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts