The electricity in afan is measured by wats.
Ampere (A) is the unit of electric current.Volt (V) is the unit of electric potential.Coulomb (C) is the unit for electric charge.and many others units for electricity
There is no limit to the number of times electricity could be measured.
Electric energy is measure in Units which are kilowatt-hours. Your electricity meter records the usage in Units over the billing period. The meter measures the true power and not the volts times the amps.
Electricity is NEVER produced. It only CHANGES from one form to another because it is a type of energy. e.g. Electric energy is CHANGED into kinetic energy to move my fan
Current is basically, the rate of flow of charges through a conductor or wire. It is commonly denoted by the alphabet I and measured in Amperes. I = ne/t n = no of electrons e = charge on an electron t = time taken for electron to move
Of course the electric fan will work.
electricity
An electric motor, an electric fan
It is economical to operate an electric fan by thru electricity
Electrical to kinetic.
The power of a fan cannot be measured in cubic inches.
An electric fan became a common item because it was cheaper to run and portable. An electric fan uses less electricity than air conditioning. An electric fan can be taken from one room to another.
Ampere (A) is the unit of electric current.Volt (V) is the unit of electric potential.Coulomb (C) is the unit for electric charge.and many others units for electricity
the chatter is electric because the fan works with the passage of electricity.
Electric current is a flow of electrons is a measure of the quantity of electrical charge passing any point of the wire in a unit time.And, electric current is measured in ampere (A).Whereas, electric charge is the quantity of electricity that flows in electric currents . And , it is measured in coulomb (C)
An electric fan is one that that runs on the power of electricity. These fans usually plug into the wall.
In the SI standard for physics units (see NIST website,) quantities of electricity are measured in coulombs, same as the quantity of electric charge.