15500 nano amperes or .0155 milli amperes or .0000155 amperes
AmperesAnother AnswerThere really is no such thing as a 'rate of current flow'; if it existed, then it would be expressed in amperes per second.
KVa is not the same as the amperes because KVa is the unit for reactive power while amperes is the unit for current.
EMF is electromotive force. It is another name for voltage. Voltage is electric potential in joules per coulomb. Current is electric flow, in amperes. Amperes are coulombs per second. Voltage and current are not the same thing, and "emf current", or "voltage current" does not make sense.
Since power is voltage times amperes, in order to double the power while voltage remains the same, you must double the current - 4 amps in this case.
A flow of electrons in an electrical circuit is called a current, which is the name given to the amount of electrical charge flowing in a certain period of time.Any total quantity of electrical charge is measured in coulombs.Any flow of electrical current is measured in amps.1 amp is equal to a flow of 1 coulomb of electrical charge in one second of time.
No, 200mA is not the same as kilohms.Amperes is a unit of current flow. Ohms is a unit of resistance. Other than being related by Ohm's law - Voltage = amperes x ohms - the two units are not the same.
Six, Voltage is the same in a parallel circuit but current divides to total the sum of each branch. See Kirchoffs current law.
Current is the flow of electrical charge, measured in amperes. One ampere is defined as one coulomb per second. One coulomb is about 6.24x1018 protons or electrons.A few more terms to crystallize things... Some people confuse current and voltage. They are not the same thing. Current, as stated above is a flow of charge, while voltage is the energy behind that charge, in volts, or joules per coulomb. Power is the rate of work done by the energy, in joules per second or watts, or volts times amperes. Energy, joules, is the integral of the power.
No, conventional current is the flow of positive charge whereas current is actually the flow of negative electrons.
Ohms law is E=IxR. Kirkoffs law has to do with the distribution of voltage and amperes. The amperes in a series circuit is always the same and the voltage changes. In a parallel circuit the voltage is always the same but the amperes change. You can find all the values in a circuit with limited information using these two laws.
-- "Amps" and "current" are the same thing. Electric current is measured in units of Amperes. -- The current is always the same at every point in a series circuit, no matter how many resistors of the same or different values are in the circuit.
Depends on the rating of the source. For the same electrical load, a higher voltage will require lower current, but there's no specific current associated with 440V.