Voltage is the measure of electrical potential difference between two points, while current (measured in Amps) is the flow of electrical charge over time. The relationship between voltage, current, and resistance is defined by Ohm's Law: V = I R, indicating that higher voltage is needed to drive current through materials with higher resistance. A useful analogy compares voltage to water pressure, current to water flow rate, and resistance to the size of a pipe. In conductive materials, electrons drift due to an applied voltage, and the movement of these electrons constitutes the current. Understanding voltage as the work required to separate charges helps clarify its role in electrical circuits.