Volt: Difference between revisions

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<onlyinclude>The '''volt''' is the SI unit that measures [[voltage]] difference or ''potential difference''. The symbol for volt is V.</onlyinclude> The volt can be thought of as a [[joule|J]]/[[Coulomb|C]] because the voltage indicates how much [[energy]] would be gained by transporting a given amount of [[electric charge]] (in coulombs).
[[File:voltage.jpg|400px|thumb|right|Figure 1. These are examples of various batteries that hold a voltage of 1.5<ref>File:AA AAA AAAA A23 battery comparison-1.jpg - Wikimedia Commons", Commons.wikimedia.org, 2018. [Online]. Available: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AA_AAA_AAAA_A23_battery_comparison-1.jpg. [Accessed: 17- Aug- 2018].</ref>]]


Some typical voltages include: 1.5 V on C, D, AA, and AAA batteries; 9 V on 9 V batteries and 120 V on North American electrical [[outlet]]s.
<onlyinclude>The '''volt''' is the SI unit that measures [[voltage]] difference or ''[[potential difference]]'' between two points on a [[conductor]]. The symbol for volt is V.</onlyinclude><ref>A. Butterfield and J. Szymanski, A dictionary of electronics and electrical engineering.</ref> The volt can be thought of as a [[joule|J]]/[[Coulomb|C]] because the voltage indicates how much [[energy]] would be gained by transporting a given amount of [[electric charge]] (in coulombs).
 
Some typical voltages include: 1.5 V on C, D, AA, and AAA [[battery|batteries]] (see figure 1); 9 V on 9 V batteries and 120 V on North American electrical [[outlet]]s.


To learn more about the volt please see Dr. Rowlett's [http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictV.html#volt dictionary of units].
To learn more about the volt please see Dr. Rowlett's [http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictV.html#volt dictionary of units].
==For Further Reading==
*[[Voltage]]
*[[Conductor]]
*[[Current]]
*[[Electric charge]]
*[[Battery]]
* Or explore a [[Special:Random| random page!]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Uploaded]]
[[Category:Uploaded]]

Revision as of 21:23, 21 August 2018

Figure 1. These are examples of various batteries that hold a voltage of 1.5[1]

The volt is the SI unit that measures voltage difference or potential difference between two points on a conductor. The symbol for volt is V.[2] The volt can be thought of as a J/C because the voltage indicates how much energy would be gained by transporting a given amount of electric charge (in coulombs).

Some typical voltages include: 1.5 V on C, D, AA, and AAA batteries (see figure 1); 9 V on 9 V batteries and 120 V on North American electrical outlets.

To learn more about the volt please see Dr. Rowlett's dictionary of units.

For Further Reading

References

  1. File:AA AAA AAAA A23 battery comparison-1.jpg - Wikimedia Commons", Commons.wikimedia.org, 2018. [Online]. Available: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AA_AAA_AAAA_A23_battery_comparison-1.jpg. [Accessed: 17- Aug- 2018].
  2. A. Butterfield and J. Szymanski, A dictionary of electronics and electrical engineering.