It is not the voltage that kills you, but the amount of current and also where it passes. A very small current passing near your heart can stop it beating because it is controlled by electricity.
I think people have been killed by as little as 50 volts (they were very unlucky). On the other hand, when you comb your hair on a sunny day and make sparks, there are thousands of volts but you hardly feel it.
On how much current (measured in Amperes, not Volts) it can supply. The hair comb (or a Van De Graaf generator – see http://science.howstuffworks.com/transport/engines-equipment/vdg.htm) can generate lots of volts, but only tiny amps. A car battery has only 12 volts (usually; many trucks have 24) but can generate 200 Amps. Fortunately it does not have enough voltage to push that many Amps through your body, because there is a formula that involves the resistance of your body to the current, the number of Volts and the maximum number of Amps that can flow.
It is not the voltage that kills you, but the amount of current and also where it passes. A very small current passing near your heart can stop it beating because it is controlled by electricity.
I think people have been killed by as little as 50 volts (they were very unlucky). On the other hand, when you comb your hair on a sunny day and make sparks, there are thousands of volts but you hardly feel it.
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