EMF stands for Electro-Motive Force, commonly known as Voltage, measured in Volts.
the unit of "e.m.f" is "volt"
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volts abbr (V)
It's primary usage is to determine the nature of an induced EMF from changes in the magnetic flux through a circuit. However, you must use Faraday's Law (and a unit conversion factor) to determine the SIZE of such an EMF.
Both emf and pd have the same unit. namely volt Both have the same definition. It is the work performed in moving unit positive charge right from one point to the other against the electric field. Both are got by the product of current and resistance. But emf is the pd across of a cell or source when it is not in action. So emf is slightly greater than the pd in the circuit as there may be a little bit of internal resistance.
My physics teacher wrote out homework answers for us. On a few EMF problems, he has the EMF unit listed as Weber. On others, he has it as volts. I have a quiz tomorrow so I need to know which SI unit i'm supposed to use. Thanks! Few side notes: the formula we're using is E=delta I (subscript B) /delta t . There was no change in the formula for the different problems or what not. and somehow weber / time went to volts, other times it didn't. BY: VOLT
The SI unit of EMF (electromotive force) in a direct current circuit is Volts. The circuits current is measured in ampere's
EMF (E''electromotive Force'') is another term for Volts, hence the E in electronic formulas and EMF is measured with a volt meter. A potentiometer is not a meter at all, it is a variable resistor
Gram
It is degrees.