How Does Voltage Drop Across a Resistor?

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Hello,

I am having conceptual difficulties trying to understand how voltage is dropped across a resistor. The whole idea of it is confusing to me, where does this voltage go?

Could it be explained in terms of point charges and electric fields, which is how I am able to visualize potential difference.

The way I see it, the positive charges move across a resistor and face some sort of resistance to their motion, but how does that relate to the charges losing potential?
 
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where does this voltage go?
Voltage is not a material, it does not "go" somewhere.
Where does the height of a ladder (not your height!) "go" if you climb it down?

The way I see it, the positive charges move across a resistor and face some sort of resistance to their motion, but how does that relate to the charges losing potential?
They need some energy to cross the resistor. Moving positive charges are quite rare.
 
positive charges don't move as much as the electrons move to fill "electron holes"