State and derive joul's law of heating effect of an electric current.
joules are the amount of energy
A calorie is about 4.2 joules, therefore a kilocalorie is about 4200 joules. You can multiply by this number.
BTU x 1,055.056 = joules
82.9 joules.
This will give you an idea of converting between Temperature and Average Kinetic Energy (Joules). Scroll down and take a look at Boltzmann's Constant - Wikipedia as well as The Ideal Gas Law - Wikipedia.
transportation
It is a combination of Greek, Roman, Latin, and British law.
we derived the answer to the question by applying ohm's law.
You cannot. Newton's third law is independent of the first and second laws.
You don't need a "law of current" from that, but you can derive it from Ohm's Law.
See the links below. Remember to distinguish where necessary between the universal gas constant R (joules per mole Kelvin) and the particular gas constant R (joules per kilogram Kelvin)
James Prescott Joule, born in England in 1818, discovered conservation of energy leading to the development of the first law of theromodynamics.
The1989 Children Act.
The local governments usually derive power from the constitution on which they are established. Most orderly societies have a rule of law which the people in the particular society subscribe to.
Secondary law is the contents of law books, legal encyclopedias, legal periodicals, & the like that report on & compile rules that the writers distill & derive from the "primary" sources.
56 kilo joules = 56,000 joules
To convert from kilo joules to joules you have divide by 1000 as 1 kilo joule is equal to 1000 joules. E.g. 2 kilo joules equals 2000 joules.