A charge of 4 C4C is passing through points A and B on a circuit. If the charge's electric potential changes from 27 J27J to 3 J3J, what is the voltage between points A and B?

1 Answer
Feb 1, 2016

If a charge QQ passes through the points AA and BB; and the difference of the electric potential between points AA and BB is DeltaW. Then the voltage DeltaV between the two points is given by:

DeltaV=(DeltaW)/Q

Let the electric potential at point A be denoted by W_A and let the electric potential at point B be denoted by W_B.

implies W_A=27J and W_B=3J

Since the charge is moving from A to B therefore the difference of electrical potential between points can be found out by:
W_B-W_A
=3J-27J=-24J

implies DeltaW=-24J

It is given that charge Q=4C.

implies DeltaV=(-24J)/4=-6Volt

implies DeltaV=-6Volt

Hence, the voltage between points A and B is -6Volt.

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