A microhenry is one millionth of a Henry. A Henry is defined as the inductance required to sustain a rate of change of current of one ampere per second with a voltage of one volt. By scaling the units, then, a micro Henry is the inductance required to sustain a rate of change of current of one ampere per second with a voltage of one micro volt. Or, more reasonably, one milli ampere per second with one milli volt.
Formally, the equation of an inductor is ...
di/dt = V/L
... meaning that amperes per second is volts divided by henries.
This is the symbol for a microhenry, or one-millionth of a henry. The henry is the SI unit for inductance.
2300lm Comment I think you mean lumens, not lumen's. No that answer is wrong Watts (energy usage) / Lumens (light output) 25 is equal to 200 35 is equal to 325 40 is equal to 450 60 is equal to 800 75 is equal to 1100 100 is equal to 1600 125 is equal to 2000 150 is equal to 2600 36 watts would be about 350 Lumens
A capacitance of 0.00036 farads is equal to 360 microfarads.
10MW is equal to 10,000,000 watts or 13,404 HP
Is there a specific language that you're after? The list may vary between them, but I'll try to include them all. = (Equal To - in BASIC) <> (Not Equal To - in BASIC) == (Equal Value - Conventional) === (Equal Value and Type - No implicit type conversion) != (Not Equal - Conventional) !== (Different Value or Type - No implicit type conversion) > (Greater Than) < (Less Than) >= (Greater Than or Equal To) <= (Less Than or Equal To) I believe some languages also use /= as a Not Equal operator.
This is the symbol for a microhenry, or one-millionth of a henry. The henry is the SI unit for inductance.
The reading will be very close to zero ohms.
It is equal to 1.8It is equal to 1.8It is equal to 1.8It is equal to 1.8
as equal as, so equal as, more equal than, the most equal of.
equal set mean the set is equal equal est means that the set is equal
Yes, any two equal things are equal!
equal angles are angles that are equal
Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.Angles are not necessarily equal, and sides are not necessarily equal in length.
You can use the Not function or the <> operator, which is the < and the > beside each other. To see if the values in A1 and A2 are not equal to each other, you can type: =A1<>A2 or =Not(A1=A2) In each case they will either give you TRUE if they are not equal or FALSE if they are equal, in the cell that you enter the formula into.
The two are equal.
It's (NOT its) equal to 1.
No, 14 does not equal to 35