Electric current is the rate of charge flow past a given point in an electric circuit, measured in Coulombs/second which is named Amperes. In most DC electric circuits, it can be assumed that the resistance to current flow is a constant so that the current in the circuit is related to voltage and resistance by Ohm's law. The standard abbreviations for the units are 1 A = 1C/s.
Coulombs per second also known as amperes.
"Rate of flow of electric charge" is called current. The SI unit of current is the ampere. It is one of the SI base units.
The unit for electric resistance is the ohm.
Amperes or simply called Amps
unit of resistance is OHM
It is measured in ohms.
amperes
Amperes
volts
Current is the flow of electric charge or the rate of the flow of an electric charge through a conductor.
In an ammeter, the magnitude of the electric current - that which is measured in amperes - is measured via the magnetic deflection it causes in a needle. Note that this measures the flow of electric charge; it doesn't tell you specifically whether what is moving is electrons.
The flow in a circuit is called the electric current and it is measured by voltages. The number of volts that are present in the charge will determine the strength of the electric current.
"I" represents the current which is the flow of electric charge. Impedance is the measure of the opposition to the flow of current at a given voltage usually in a.c. circuits.
Electromotive force, or voltage, is measured in volts. It makes current flow in electric circuits. It is related to current and resistance by Ohm's law. And I don't know what you mean by "excess accumulation of electric charge"... Voltage is energy per charge, or joules per coulomb. That energy overcomes resistance in ohms and forces a current in coulombs per second (amperes) to flow. This is ohm's law; that one volt is one ampere divided by one ohm. Voltage is measured as a potential difference between two points, whereas current is a charge passing a single point. In moving from one level of energy to another, that charge does work. The watt is one joule per second, and is also volts times amperes. Have I clarified it enough, or do you need more information?
The rate of flow of electric charge isamperage."Amperage" is slang. The correct term is current.
Rate of flow of charge is called electric current. Generally we knows current means flow.... here rate of flow of charge means how much charge flows in a given time is called electric current
Current is the flow of electric charge or the rate of the flow of an electric charge through a conductor.
Electrical resistance, measured in Ohms
The SI unit for measuring an electric current is the ampere, which is the flow of electric charge across a surface at the rate of one coulombper second.
In an ammeter, the magnitude of the electric current - that which is measured in amperes - is measured via the magnetic deflection it causes in a needle. Note that this measures the flow of electric charge; it doesn't tell you specifically whether what is moving is electrons.
Electrical resistance, measured in Ohms
That is called electric current, or simply current.
Current is the rate of flow of electric charge.
Electric current
Electric current is simply the flow of free electrons in a conductor. It is usually defined as the rate of charge flow, because the free electrons represent an electric charge.
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)