Ohms are used to measure resistance, and volts are used to measure potential difference -two completely-different quantities. You might as well be asking, "How many kilometres are there in 12 degrees Celsius?"
ohms is the unit of resistance while volts is the unit of voltage
...90 volts...
I = V/R 5 volts / 2600 ohms = .00192 or round to .002.
ohms = volts/amperes 6 ohms = 120 volts / 20 amperes
Work it out yourself -the equation is: voltage = current x resistance.
Ohm's law: Volts = Amps * Ohms, or Amps = Volts / Ohms 12 volts / 0.5 ohms = 24 amps
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
It's not that simple. The basic formula is Volts / Ohms = Amps. For 30 Volts you'd get 0.5 Amps, for 60 Volts you'd get 1 Amp, for 120 Volts you'd get 2 Amps.
Ohms can be found by using these formulas. Ohms = Volts/Amps, Ohms = (Volts (squared))/Watts, Ohms = Watts/(Amps (squared)).
12 volts.
12 volts
It will take 36 volts to make 12 amps go through 3 ohms of resistance. Ohm's law states that the current in amperes is equal to voltage over resistance.
ohms is the unit of resistance while volts is the unit of voltage
...90 volts...
In a 12VDC circuit with a 1K load, there will be 12ma of current. (Ohm's law: Volts = Amps * Ohms, so Amps = Volts / Ohms.)
Ohm's Law: Voltage = Amperes times Resistance 9 volts = amps * 10 ohms amps = .9
Assuming DC and resistive loads, resistance equals voltage across the load, divided by the current through it. In this case 120/10 or 12 ohms.