Please don't type "the following" if you don't provide a list. In any case, it is a volt.
One joule is equal to one coulomb of charge multiplied by one volt of electric potential difference. Therefore, one joule is equivalent to one coulomb of charge.
One coulomb is equal to the amount of electric charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second.
An ampere is a unit of electric current, representing the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit. A coulomb is a unit of electric charge, representing the quantity of charge passing through a point in a circuit. They are related in that 1 ampere is equal to 1 coulomb per second.
It does not make much difference because potential is the energy utilized to move one coulomb of charge. If energy for moving any amount of charge is considered, then potential term disappears. That is all.
The work done by the electric field on a point charge is equal to the product of the charge and the change in electric potential energy.
A volt is not a unit of energy. It is a unit of something that in English is usually called "voltage". It is really about electric potential. One volt is equal to one joule/coulomb; that means that if an electric charge of 1 coulomb goes through a potential difference of 1 volt, it will either gain or lose 1 joule of energy.
One joule is equal to one coulomb of charge multiplied by one volt of electric potential difference. Therefore, one joule is equivalent to one coulomb of charge.
One coulomb is equal to the amount of electric charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second.
A coulomb is a measure of electric charge and is equal to -6.24151 x 10^18 electrons.
That's another name for something that is more commonly known as "voltage". It refers to the energy (work) required to transfer an electrical charge against an electric field. The unit, "volt", is equal to joule per coulomb.
The potential difference ('voltage') is equal to the work done per unit charge, i.e. the energy given to each Coulomb of charge. So, a six Volt battery provides six Joules of energy to each Coulomb of charge.
An ampere is a unit of electric current, representing the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit. A coulomb is a unit of electric charge, representing the quantity of charge passing through a point in a circuit. They are related in that 1 ampere is equal to 1 coulomb per second.
That's the coulomb, equal to the quantity of charge moved by a current of 1 ampere during an interval of 1 second.
It does not make much difference because potential is the energy utilized to move one coulomb of charge. If energy for moving any amount of charge is considered, then potential term disappears. That is all.
The work done by the electric field on a point charge is equal to the product of the charge and the change in electric potential energy.
A coulomb is equal to 6.24 × 10 (10 is to the power of 18)
Coulomb is a unit of electric charge while Faraday is a unit of electric charge quantity present in one mole of electrons. One Coulomb is equal to one Faraday constant, which is approximately 96,485 coulombs.