The Ampere is the unit of electric current. It depends upon a voltage in order for it to occur, and the Volt is that unit. The Ohm is the unit of resistance and represents the difficulty of moving the electrons by the voltage.
True...
Voltage is a measurement of the potential difference in ellectricity the biger the difference between active and neutral the bigger the voltage. The amount of ellectricity is measured in Kilowat hours.
AnswerNo. 'Electricity' is not a quantity, so cannot be measured. 'Electricity' is the name given to a branch of science. The volt, however, is the SI unit of measurement for potential and potential difference (voltage).
Further to the above answer, the kilowatt hour is a unit of measurement of energy, not 'amount of electricity' -again, there is no such quantity!
Ampere, or Amp for short.
1 A = 1 Coulomb per second, where 1 Coulomb is equal to a certain number of electrons. IF a load draws 1 Amp, it is drawing 1 Coulomb every second.
There are several units related to electricity.
The unit of current is the ampere.
The unit of electric potential, more commonly known as voltage, is the volt.
No, a coulomb (C) is a unit of energy. The unit of current is the ampere (A), which is commonly abbreviated 'amp'. A current of one amp means a movement of one coulomb of energy per second.
The SI unit of electric current is the Ampere.
No.
Voltage is measured in volts. Current is in amperes. (Amps for short)
the Ampere.
1 ampere = 1 coulomb of charge per second
No its to amperes
Volts
Type your answer here... volts
Electric current is measured in amperes. 1 ampere = 1 coulomb/second
V = I*R, so take 100 volts and divide it by the value of the resistance to get the current. Current is measured in amperes.
the capacity of a transformer is defined as a product of voltage and current flowing through it.AS THE CURRENT IS MEASURED IN AMPERES AND VOLTAGE IN VOLTS, Hence transformers are measured/rated in KVA
voltage is measured in terms of volts ; current is measured in terms of amps.........................................
Volts
Electric current is measured in amps not voltsElectric voltage is measured in volts.
Volts cause current to flow through the load. The current is measured in amps, and the volts multiplied by the amps gives the power in watts.
The three electrical quantities are current voltage and resistance. Current is measured in amperes (A) and is the rate at which electricity flows through a conductor. Voltage is measured in volts (V) and is the electrical force pushing the current through the conductor. Resistance is measured in ohms () and is the opposition to the flow of current. Current - measured in amperes (A) Voltage - measured in volts (V) Resistance - measured in ohms ()
Volts; The Ampere is the unit for current in charge per second.
Voltage is what is measured in volts. This is the electric potential difference between two places. The electric current is also measured so as to ascertain the voltage.
if you are mesering its presure it is volts
Type your answer here... volts
Electric current is measured in amperes. 1 ampere = 1 coulomb/second
Voltage: The proper term is 'electromotive force'. It's measured in volts.Current: Measured in amperes.Resistance: Measured in ohms.
V = I*R, so take 100 volts and divide it by the value of the resistance to get the current. Current is measured in amperes.