NONE! By itself this is a meaningless question. Doubt it? pick up a 3 ohm resister and see if you get anything in amperage out of it . add some voltage to it and you will get some amperage, depending on the amount of voltage. Of course add to much voltage and you will burn the resistor up, depending on its wattage rating
No, resistors are measured in ohms, not amps. Ohms represent the resistance offered by the resistor to the flow of current, whereas amps (amperes) represent the measure of current flowing through a circuit.
There is no conversion. They measure different things. It's like asking 120 miles equals how many pounds? Voltage is also called electric potential. In a water analogy it's like pressure. Amperage is also called electric current. In a water analogy it's like flow rate.
Just use Ohm's Law: V=IR (voltage = current x resistance; using units: volts = amperes x ohms).
Ohm's Law states that the current (amps) in a circuit is directly proportional to the voltage and inversely proportional to the resistance (ohms). This relationship can be described by the formula I = V/R, where I is the current, V is the voltage, and R is the resistance.
In a parallel circuit, the total resistance is calculated as the reciprocal of the sum of the reciprocals of each individual resistance. So, for three resistances of 20 ohms, 20 ohms, and 10 ohms, the total resistance will be 1 / (1/20 + 1/20 + 1/10) = 1 / (0.05 + 0.05 + 0.1) = 1 / 0.2 = 5 ohms.
There are three formulas that you can use. Amps = Volts/Ohms Amps = Watts/Volts Amps = sq root of Watts/Ohms
Ohm's law: Volts = Amps * Ohms, or Amps = Volts / Ohms 12 volts / 0.5 ohms = 24 amps
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
Ohm's Law: Voltage = Amperes times Resistance 9 volts = amps * 10 ohms amps = .9
Ohms can be found by using these formulas. Ohms = Volts/Amps, Ohms = (Volts (squared))/Watts, Ohms = Watts/(Amps (squared)).
It's not that simple. The basic formula is Volts / Ohms = Amps. For 30 Volts you'd get 0.5 Amps, for 60 Volts you'd get 1 Amp, for 120 Volts you'd get 2 Amps.
Can not do it without knowing the voltage I = E/R. Amps = Voltage/Ohms.
3 things Volts, ohms, and amps
None. Amps and Ohms measure different things.
The ohms will usually stay the same unless the Amps are somehow effecting the temperature. The Amps will always change with the volts.
To calculate volts, you also need to know the resistance (ohms) in the circuit according to Ohm's Law. The formula to find volts is V = I x R, where V is voltage, I is current in amps, and R is resistance in ohms. So, to determine volts given 0.01 amps, you'd need the resistance value.
0.24 ampere