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RE: electrical units
Original poster: "John H. Couture" <couturejh-at-mgte-dot-com>
The concept of the volt has always interested me. The volt is a "work"
function and in the MKS system is shown as "joules per coulomb". The work
done to move a charge from infinity to a point in an electrostatic field is
one joule per coulomb or one volt. How would you relate this to creating the
voltages on the secondary terminal of a Tesla coil?
John Couture
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-----Original Message-----
From: Tesla list [mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com]
Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2004 10:16 AM
To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
Subject: Re: electrical units
Original poster: "Dr. Resonance" <resonance-at-jvlnet-dot-com>
Suggested reading:
A History of Physics by Florian CaJori
Dr. Resonance
>
> >I have no idea where the Volt came from, or the Ampere, for that
matter.
> I suspect they were totally arbitrary.
>
> Good question. This is all I remember:
>
> One Ampare is one Coulomb of charge flowing past a point per second.
>
> A volt is the EMF required to force one Ampare through one Ohm.
>
> Now... was the Coulomb (6.25 x 10^18 electrons) defined first and if so
how?
>
> And the Ohm?
>
> Tom L.
>
>
>