The electric current is given by:
I = V/R
Resistance (Ohms) = Voltage (v) / Current (I) I hope this hepls.. :)
It is made out of small particals, smaller than atoms called electrons.
The heating element of an electric heater is a "resistor", the cord which conducts the electricity is not. The resistance of the element of an electric heater is very high. As current flows through the heating element, it becomes red hot and glows. On the other hand, the resistance of the cord is low. It does not become red hot when current flows through it.
With an electric motor. A force acts on an electric current when it runs through a magnetic field (called the Lorentz Force) see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_motor
current may pass to the earth in case of short circuit without any harm.
the formula for electric current is VI ,where v is voltage then I is the current. the unit used for current is ampere and volts for voltage. multiply the total I to the Voltage The formular of electric current is given by I=V/R ,I=P/V
the formula for electric current is VI ,where v is voltage then I is the current. the unit used for current is ampere and volts for voltage. multiply the total I to the Voltage The formular of electric current is given by I=V/R ,I=P/V
There are several formulas to find out leakage current, but one is the general electric current equation. This electric current equation is I=Qt.
..using the formula Voltage(V)=Current(I) * Resistance(R) .. we can get the result ...current will be 5 Ampere
Yes, an electric current is the flow of charged particles.
DC current
Current is the flow of electrons in a system usually taught from positive to ground or zero potential. It is defined by the formula current = voltage/resistance Everything has resistance - even wire.
A current.
Electric current carries electric charge. Actually to say it in the right sense, we have to say that electric current is the rate of flow of electric charges
The flow of electric charges is current.
Basically you apply a voltage to a load (the iron's heating element) which induces a current. The current through the load generates heat according to the formula Power = Current^2 * Resistance.
An electric charge is a physical quantity of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed near an electromagnetic field. Its formula is given as: charge = current x time.