1000 ohms.
Multiply by 1000. 1K ohm = 1000 ohms
In a 12VDC circuit with a 1K load, there will be 12ma of current. (Ohm's law: Volts = Amps * Ohms, so Amps = Volts / Ohms.)
If the question means to indicate multiplication, then the product is 75,000 cubic ohms.This quantity has no physical meaning or significance.
It is a passive electrical device with a resistive value of 1000 ohms, used for limiting current or dropping voltage.
1,000 ohms and 3,000 ohms in series = total effective resistance is (1,000 + 3,000) = 4,000 ohms.Power dissipated = I2 R.I = sqrt( P / R ) = sqrt (.025/4,000) = sqrt(6.25 x 10-6) = 0.0025 AVoltage drop = I RAcross 1,000 ohms, V = 1,000 I = (1,000 x 0.0025)= 2.5 volts.
1000
You can consider a short circuit to be a resistor with R=0 Ohms. It is then clear by the equation for calculation of parallel resistance that the combined resistance of a resistor in parallel to a short circuit is 0. Consider the following example with R1= 1k Ohms and R2= 0 Ohms: Rtotal = R1*R2 / (R1+R2) = R1*0 / R1 = 0 Ohms.
If by 1k you mean 1 kilogram (kg) then:1 kg = 1000 g
I think you mean the meter is rated at 1K ohms per volt. It means that with a series resistance designed to give FSD at any required voltage, the total series resistance must be 1000 ohms per volt (100K ohms for 100volts) . This is because 1K ohms per volt is just another way of saying that the full scale reading occurs at 1mA current. In that case a full scale deflection for 100 volts applied, 1mA is obtained with a total resistance (meter + added resistance) of 100 kOhms which is your loading resistance.
1000 ohms are in a kilohm. Think about it as kilo meaning thousand. It makes sense in the metric system. One kilogram Sugar equals 1000 grams of sugar. Same with Ohm. One kilohm equals 1000 ohm.
That is 366,300 ohms.
3500 Ohms