voltage is equal to resistance multiplyed by current. you have the 2 pieces of info, just multiply
10 Amps (that's the Current) X 10 Ohms (the Resistance) = 100 Volts (the voltage drop across the resistance)
100 Volts X 10 Amps = 1000 Watts (the Power dissipated.) ...
Voltage across a resistance = (resistance) x (current through the resistance) =4 x 1.4 = 5.6If the ' 1.4 ' is Amperes of current, then the required voltage is 5.6 volts.
Ohm's Law: voltage is current times resistance, so 8 amps times 2 ohms is 16 volts.
Electrical current is measured in amperes.
Use Ohm's law. V = I * R where V is voltage in volts, I is current in amperes, and R is resistance in ohms.
Power in a circuit is inversely proportional to the resistance, all other things being equal. Voltage equals amperes time resistances, so amperes equals voltage divided by resistance. Watts equals voltage times amperes, so watts equals voltage squared divided by resistance.
The voltage is 3 x 36 or 108 volts.
Voltage across a resistance = (resistance) x (current through the resistance) =4 x 1.4 = 5.6If the ' 1.4 ' is Amperes of current, then the required voltage is 5.6 volts.
Ohm's Law: voltage is current times resistance, so 8 amps times 2 ohms is 16 volts.
U = RxI so 11x20=220 volts
No, it is the current (amperes) that vary according to the resistance.
Electrical current is measured in amperes.
Just use Ohm's Law: V=IR (voltage = current x resistance; using units: volts = amperes x ohms).
The three electrical quantities are current voltage and resistance. Current is measured in amperes (A) and is the rate at which electricity flows through a conductor. Voltage is measured in volts (V) and is the electrical force pushing the current through the conductor. Resistance is measured in ohms () and is the opposition to the flow of current. Current - measured in amperes (A) Voltage - measured in volts (V) Resistance - measured in ohms ()
Use Ohm's law. V = I * R where V is voltage in volts, I is current in amperes, and R is resistance in ohms.
One milliwatt. Voltage is amperes times resistance, and watts is voltage times current.
Power in a circuit is inversely proportional to the resistance, all other things being equal. Voltage equals amperes time resistances, so amperes equals voltage divided by resistance. Watts equals voltage times amperes, so watts equals voltage squared divided by resistance.
Ohm's Law: Resistance in ohms is voltage in volts divided by current in amperes.