Power= V * A
so 120 V * 5 A = 600 W (J/s)
Watts can be calculated by multiplying the voltage (V) by the current (I) in amperes. The formula is: Watts = Volts x Amps. For example, if you have a circuit with a voltage of 120V and a current of 5A, the power output would be 600 watts (120V x 5A = 600W).
No. You have to have 19v and 5a
You are confusing electrical potential (Volts) and power (Watts). The equation for power (watts) is P = VI where V is volts (a measure of electrical "pressure") and I is current in amperes (the rate of flow of electricity). If the system is 120V and the power used is 600W then the current used is 5A. If the system is 240V and the power used is 600W then the current used is 2.5A.
The GCF is 5a.
80a^3
Do the coefficients first. Since 5 is a factor of 15, it is automatically the GCF. Choose the lowest power of the common variables. The GCF is 5a.
P=VI => I=P/V => I=60W/12V => I=5A 5 amps when the globe is operating
real P= V * I *cos(phase angle between V and I)for purely resistive loads or DC voltages this equals real power P=V*I = 120*5= 600Wattsfor not pure resistive loads you'd have to measure the phase angle between Voltage and Current to get real power.However, at home, the utility company charges for Complex power = V*I.So you'd still pay for V*I.
The GCF is 5a.
5a = -5a + 5Add 5a to each side:10a = 5Divide each side by 10:a = 5/10 = 1/2
(5a)^2 or a^2+10a+25
5a-20=