V=IR where V is the voltage (volts), I is current (amps) and R is resistance (ohms)
I dont know the answer!
On comparing ampere and milliampere . we can tell the relation between them as follows. 1 amp =1000000 mamp.
What I think atleast. 30 milli ampere is the amount of ampere there's needed to kill a human being, or atleast close to. But you also need a x amount of Voltage. The higher voltage = the lower ampere, and the other way around. But then again it all depends on how much voltage you have. So you can't really say that 30 milli ampere is deadlier than 30 ampere. Because if you have 700 voltage and 30 ampere. Then that will do the same thing to you as 70 voltage and 30 milli ampere would do; most likely kill you. 49 voltage is the amount of voltage there's required to kill a human, with 30 milli ampere. If you have less than 49 voltage, you won't die, it will hurt of course. The reason for this, is that the voltage is what 'carries' the ampere around. The ampere is what strikes, and the voltage is the carrier. Hope this helped a bit.
A volt is the unit of measurement for electrical potential difference, while an ampere is the unit of measurement for electrical current. The relationship between them is defined by Ohm's Law, which states that voltage equals current multiplied by resistance (V = I x R). In other words, voltage is proportional to current when resistance is constant.
Voltage Ampere or Voltage Amplitude
The unit of voltage is the "volt". The unit of current, sometimes called "amperage", is the "ampere".
by multiplying by resistance and dividing by voltage
A kilowatt is an unit of true power in an AC circuit -as measured by a wattmeter. A kilovolt ampere is an unit of apparent power in an AC circuit, which is the product of the voltage across a load by the current through it. The relationship between the two is: kilowatt = (kilovolt ampere) x (power factor of load)
A volt - ampere is the unit for the product of voltage and current. This is power. Power = voltage x current. The unit of power is more usually called the watt. Volts x amps = watts.
It depends on voltage. You did not provide voltage, nor did you provide resistance from which we could calculate voltage. Please restate the question.
Watts = Voltage X Amperes X Power Factor Power Factor = Cosine of the Angle between Voltage and Current For purely resistive circuits, Power in Watts = Voltage X Amperes Watts divided by 1000 = kiloWatts
How high is the voltage that is being used? With high enough voltage any current is dangerous.