The equation you are looking for, R = E/I, is derived from the definition of the ohm, not from Ohm's Law. Ohm's Law is properly-called 'Ohm's Law of Constant Proportionality', which states that, for certain (linear) loads, the ratio of voltage to current is constant for changes in voltage. The above equation applies whether Ohm's Law does or does not.
Resistance is a measure of how well current flows through the material. As such, voltage divided by current in amps results in resistance
current
German physict Georg Ohm
The current through each resistor is equal to the voltage across it divided by its resistance for series and parallel circuits.
Ohm's Law: Current = Voltage divided by resistance 9 volts divided by 3 ohms = 3 amperes.
V = IR The amont of current passig through a conductor is directly proportional to potential differenxe v applied across its end provided the temperature & physical state doesn't change..!!thanks
Voltage and current are two different things. Voltage is the electric potential difference between two points. Expressed in volts, it is also joules per coulomb. Current is the charge flow past a point. Expressed in amperes, it is also coulombs per second. You can relate voltage and current using Ohm's Law, which states that voltage is equal to current times resistance. Resistance is, therefore, equal to voltage divided by current. Using base units, resistance is equal to joules per coulomb divided by coulombs per second, which simplifies to joule-seconds per coulomb squared. That is a difficult unit to write, so we just use ohms as the unit.
No. Voltage divided by resistance is equal to current.
Ohm's Law V = I R Voltage = Current x Resistance
If resistance increases and voltage stays the same, then current decreases. Ohm's Law: Current equals Voltage divided by Resistance.
Ohm's law.
German physict Georg Ohm
I believe so. It is also equal to power divided by voltage, as well as voltage divided by resistance.
The current through each resistor is equal to the voltage across it divided by its resistance for series and parallel circuits.
Ohm so correctly said: Voltage divided by current equals resistance. Voltage divided by current will tell you the value of a circuit's resistance. But resistance is not affected by either voltage or current. It is determined by the length, cross-sectional area, and resistivity (type of conducting material) of the conductor. Resistivity is, in turn, affected by temperature. So voltage divided by current tells you what the resistance happens to be - changes in voltage or current do not affect resistance.
Electric power is not defined as current divided by voltage. Electric power (Watts) is equal to amps times voltage
Ohm's Law. It is usually written as V = I x R or in words Voltage is equal to Current times Resistance; or in your terms I = V / R.
No. V =Voltage, I =current, and R =resistancein the simple equation: V=I*R. As well, V/I=R, and. V/R=Iso Current is voltage divided by resistance
Ohm's Law: Current is voltage divided by resistance.Alternative AnswerIf, by 'statement', you are referring to a 'law', then there is no electrical law that states that 'current is voltage divided by resistance'.The relationship between voltage, current, and resistance is derived from the definition of the ohm, which is defined in terms of a volt per ampere, which can be manipulated to say that 'current is equal to voltage divided by resistance'.This is frequently, but incorrectly, described as being 'Ohm's Law', but Ohm's Law isn't universal and it only applies to a very limited range of linear (or 'ohmic') loads, whereas 'resistance is voltage divided by current' applies to allloads (linear or non-linear) at any given value of voltage.