the entire branch of electricity uses this ohms law in building their circuits..........the voltage and current relations are being brought using this ohms law
also many other laws are based upon this law only.
For an open circuit, you basically have an infinite resistance, and zero current. This can be considered a special case of Ohm's law.
Amps=Volts/Ohms
No. Ohm's law relates voltage, current and resistance: V=IR. ("I" is the symbol for current.)
No, Ohms Law applies equally well in ac as in dc.
Just use Ohm's Law: V=IR (voltage = current x resistance; using units: volts = amperes x ohms).
Study ohms law to get your head around it.
ohms law.
To find the conductance using ohms law,you take the inverse of the resistance(/R)
Current
No.
no
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
Ohms law does not consider inductance
no
Ohms law.
in transformer
Google Ohms Law. It will give you all the formulas you need to compute Ohms,Volts and Amps. Simple formulas :-)