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To find how many coulomb can be transferred in one second depends on the ampere. A coulomb is defined as 1 coulomb equals 1 ampere times 1 second or the current of one ampere in one second time.
One ampere = one coulomb every second .
1 coulomb in 1 second.
The number of amperes is unrelated to the voltage. The maximum amount of current (in amperes) that you can take from the battery depends on the exact build of the battery.
Andre Marie ampere was famous for inventing amps which are the so called base units of electrical currentsCommentAmpere did not invent 'amps' (amperes). The ampere was named in honour of Ampere many years after his death. He is famous for his research into electromagnetism and the interaction of forces due to electromagnetism.
To find how many coulomb can be transferred in one second depends on the ampere. A coulomb is defined as 1 coulomb equals 1 ampere times 1 second or the current of one ampere in one second time.
One ampere = one coulomb every second .
I am not sure what you mean, but ampere is a unit of current, not of energy. In the case of a constant current, if the current is 1 ampere in a second, it will be 1 ampere in an hour, or in a day.
1 coulomb in 1 second.
The seven basic units are: metre, kilogram, second, ampere, candela, mole, kelvin.
There are 7 units: metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, mole, candela.
You really can't compare that. * Ampere-hour is a unit of energy. If you multiply ampere x hours x voltage (the voltage is implied), you get energy. * kVA is a unit of power. Note that power is energy / time.
An ampere-hour is one ampere for one hour.A ampere is one coulomb per second, so an ampere-hour is a transfer of charge of 3600 coulombs.See the discussion page.
One ampere is equal to 1000000 microamperes.
.10 meters per a second equals 10 meters per a second
The same number as 250 Oranges is apples. A watt is a volt times an ampere.
To answer this question a voltage and pf (power factor) must be stated. kW = I x E x pf/1000.