Science, asked by muthukumarjkrm2003, 11 months ago

1 volt equal to how many watts?​

Answers

Answered by Asthetic
1

One per Amp being drawn by the load. They are different units of measurement: Volts measure the electro-magnetic pressure being produced by the system, and voltage stays constant until you add resistance and voltage drop. Watts measure the power, the ability to do work. Amps measures the number of electrons moving in a conductor.

Picture this, if you have one huge truck full of 100 boxes it can do the same amount of work as 10 little trucks with 10 boxes each. So 100 volts with 1 amp, or 10 volts at 10 amps, or 1 volt with 100 amps would all be delivering the same 100 watts of power.

An old guy named Mr. Ohm discovered this and so now we call it Ohm’s Law: Watts = Volts x Amps.

You need to know at least two of those measurements to figure out the third using basic algebra.

Then if you want to know the total amount of energy consumed you multiply the watts by the amount of time that it was used. This is what your electric meter does so you can pay your electric bill.

Answered by llchummill
0

Explanation:

i volt :28watts

keep smiling ☺

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