It depends on voltage. You did not provide voltage, nor did you provide resistance from which we could calculate voltage. Please restate the question.
That's like asking how many meters in a liter. Ampere and Volt are two DIFFERENT measurements. Ampere is how much electricity you are using, while volts are how much pressure the electricity is under(Think water). If you want to figure out how many amperes your appliance is using you could use this formula: P=UxI (Watt=Volt x Ampere) or U=RxI(Volt=Resistance x Ampere).
A - ampere is the SI unit for current. But practically we use milli ampere (mA), micro ampere (,u A)
One ampere is equal to 1000000 microamperes.
he is nice and he made ampere which we use as measuring tool....
yes you can.
One ampere = one coulomb every second .
.63 ampere draw @ 7 volts
Since kilo- means one thousand, there are one thousand amperes in a kilo-ampere, and there are 0.001 amperes in a kilo-ampere.
There are 0.000001 million amperes in 1 ampere.
Andre Ampere didn't 'invent' the ampere. The unit for current was named many years after the death of Ampere, in his honour. The ampere is defined in terms of its magnetic effect -i.e. the resulting force between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors. It was Ampere who discovered the relationship between current and force.
Since kilo- means one thousand, there are one thousand amperes in a kilo-ampere, and there are 0.001 amperes in a kilo-ampere.
The first recorded use of the electrical term ampere was in 1881, forty five years after the death of André Ampere for whom it was named.