P=I^2*R. No. 8,000 watts.
The power ( P ) in an electrical circuit can be calculated using Ohm's Law, which relates voltage ( V ), current ( I ), and resistance ( R ). The equation is given by ( P = I^2 R ), where ( P ) is the power in watts, ( I ) is the current in amperes, and ( R ) is the resistance in ohms. This formula shows that power is directly proportional to the square of the current multiplied by the resistance.
Volts = current (In amps) x Resistance (In ohms) Watts = Volts x Current x PowerFactor Power Factor = 1 in a pure resistive circuit
You can't really convert that. If you multiply volts and amperes, you get watts, a unit of power. Watts is equivalent to joules/second. If you multiply volts x amperes x seconds, you get joules.
we can calculate the current in a commmon electrical circuit by this formulae i.e,I=V\R where i is the current flowing in the conductor, R is resistance , V is the voltage.. THE FORMULA IS CORRECT but the term conductor does not suffice an explanation since a conductor is low in resistance R= resistance not conduction.
Power = E times I = (24 x 2) = 48 watts
ohms is a measure of resistance(R) in a circuit. Watts is a measure of the power(P), in this case lets assume it is the power used by the resistive element (lamp, heater etc). Power(watts)=Current(Amps)x Current(amps) x Resistance(ohms) or Resistance (ohms)=Power(W)/(current x current)
.9 watts.
To find the current in the circuit, you can use the formula: Power = Current^2 * Resistance. Given the values, you can rearrange the formula to solve for current: Current = sqrt(Power / Resistance). Plugging in the values, you get Current = sqrt(2 / 30) which simplifies to approximately 0.27 amperes.
power in watts = voltage in volts x current in amps. or power in watts = current in amps x (resistance in ohms) squared i think what you meant was power in watts =(current in amps)squared x resistance in ohms
Well, first of all, if the resistance of the circuit is 10 ohms and you connect 10 volts to it,then the current is 1 Amp, not 2 . So either there's something else in your circuit thatyou're not telling us about, or else the circuit simply doesn't exist.-- If you connect some voltage to some resistance, then the resistance heats up anddissipates (voltage)2/resistancewatts of power, and the power supply has to supply it.-- If there is some current flowing through some resistance, then the resistance heats up anddissipates (current)2 x (resistance)watts of power, and the power supply has to supply it.-- If there's a circuit with some voltage connected to it and some current flowingthrough it, then the resistance of the circuit is (voltage)/(current) ohms, the partsin the circuit heat up and dissipate (voltage) x (current) watts of power, andthe power supply has to supply it.There's no such thing as "the power of a circuit". The power supply supplies thecircuit with some amount of power, the circuit either dissipates or radiates someamount of power, and the two amounts are equal.
I don't know what the parallel circuit has to do with it. You've onlygiven me a resistor and the current through it.When 0.03A of current passes through a 1,000Ω resistor, the resistordissipates energy at the rate of 0.9 watt.
Volts = current (In amps) x Resistance (In ohms) Watts = Volts x Current x PowerFactor Power Factor = 1 in a pure resistive circuit
You would get the power in the circuit, which is measured in watts (W). The formula for power is P = V x I, where P is power, V is voltage, and I is current.
The power dissipated across a resistor, or any device for that matter, is watts, or voltage times current. If you don't know one of voltage or current, you can calculate it from Ohm's law: voltage equals resistance times current. So; if you know voltage and current, power is voltage times current; if you know voltage and resistance, watts is voltage squared divided by resistance; and if you know current and resistance, watts is current squared times resistance.
To convert arms (root mean square current) to watts (power), you need to know the voltage in the circuit. The formula for this conversion is: Power (W) = Current (Arms) x Voltage. Multiply the root mean square current (Arms) by the voltage in the circuit to get the power in watts.
You can't really convert that. If you multiply volts and amperes, you get watts, a unit of power. Watts is equivalent to joules/second. If you multiply volts x amperes x seconds, you get joules.
To convert voltage to watts, you also need to know the current in the circuit. The formula to calculate power (watts) is: power = voltage x current. As voltage alone is given, you would also need the current flowing through the circuit to accurately determine the power in watts. Without the current value, it is not possible to convert voltage directly to watts.