You are a little confused here. Here's a basic equation that will explain everything.
"Voltage=current X resistance" Only one of these terms can be a "variable", the other two are "constants". There are occasions that allow these two values to be equal. However, a "volt" is not an "amp. Think of it this way. Picture a waterfall. The height of it is "voltage", the amout of water falling at any moment is "current" while the rocks and logs are "resistance".
Practical exercise: A circuit has a voltage of 110v. It has a resistance of 10 ohms. If you plug these numbers into the equation you'll get 110/10=current. Current in the circuit is 11 amps. Hope this helps.
Megavolt is "million volts" and is a measure of electromotive force.(electrical pressure) Amps is a measure of quantity of electrons passing a point per second. This quantity per second is commonly expressed as "amps".
That would depend on the current.
Watts are a measure of power and are the result of Voltage, times current.
P=VxI Where p=power in watts, I = current in Amps, and V = Voltage in volts
So in order to solve for Volts in the following equation
1,000,000W / I = V
You must first determine the current
The correct expression is 'kilovolt amperes' (kV.A), and it is a multiple the unit of measurement ('volt ampere') for the apparent power of a load in an a.c. circuit -i.e. the product of supply voltage and load current.
Need to know the voltage. Watts = Amps x Volts.
One millionth.
1 Mega-volt = 1,000,000 Volts2500 Mega-volts = 2,500,000,000 Volts
Probably is MeV... It's stand for Mega electron Volt
No, that is too much.
No, the voltage difference is too much. A 570 volt motor falls in the 600 volt range which is separate from the 480 volt range of three phase systems.
Yes. Since the coil is run at full voltage when starting 12 volts may be too much for a 6 volt ignition coil. It would be at about 8 volts when running. There is a starting resistor.
MVA(Mega volt ampere) is the cos component of MW. So one should know the power factor of the system for conversion from MVA to MW.
Mega - Volt - Ampere - Reactive
1 million volts.
1 Mega-volt = 1,000,000 Volts2500 Mega-volts = 2,500,000,000 Volts
Mega volt amperes
milli volt amperes, unless it's MVA then it is Mega Volt Amperes. Such as in the use of large transformers
A mega is 2,000 grams
Mega is a prefix that means a million.
0.3 Mega
the answer is a mega gallon of water
Probably is MeV... It's stand for Mega electron Volt
mega volt just as Kev kilo volt in x rayit is used it is si unit of electron ev and normally radiographers calibrate value of ma and kv before take exposure