Named after the French physicist Andre Marie Ampere (1755 - 1836)
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.
Milliamp
ampere is the unit of the electric current intensity 1ampere=1coloumb/1sec intensity=quantity/time(by seconds)
1 ampere
a boy
The word is "ampere."
the unit ampere is named after André-Marie Ampère, one of the forefathers of electromagnetism.
The anagram is "ampere."
ampere - noun - unit of electrical current
ampere is the unit in all the systems for electric current
Ampere, milliampere, microampere, nanoampere, picoampere.
In Andre Ampere's basement.
i think it is AMPERE itself.....
ampere temp and ampere fuse
Ampere or amp.
Andre Ampere didn't 'invent' the ampere. The unit for current was named many years after the death of Ampere, in his honour. The ampere is defined in terms of its magnetic effect -i.e. the resulting force between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors. It was Ampere who discovered the relationship between current and force.
The ampere was named after André-Marie Ampère.