A measurement of electrical resistance. It is dimensionally equivalent to Volts / Amperes. (Voltage / Current)
AnswerAn ohm is the unit of measurement of resistance. Resistance is not affected by either voltage or current, but by the length, cross-sectional area, and resistivity of the conductor.
Ohm is a unit of measurement for resistance. The term ohm was named after a German physicist named Georg Simon Ohm.
electrical resistance, named after German physicist Georg Simon Ohm
Ohm's law is applicable to all electrical circuits.
The conventional unit of electrical resistance is the ohm
The unit of electrical resistance is the Ohm. It's written as the Greek capital Omega:Ω1 ohm = 1 amp per volt
Ohm is the SI unit of electrical impedance (AC) or the electrical resistance (DC), named after Georg Ohm. Not Ohms!
Ohm is a unit of measurement for resistance. The term ohm was named after a German physicist named Georg Simon Ohm.
Physicist Ohm refers to Georg Simon Ohm, a German physicist and mathematician who is best known for Ohm's Law, which relates the voltage, current, and resistance in an electrical circuit. Ohm's work laid the foundation for the development of the field of electrical circuit theory and helped in understanding the relationship between these fundamental electrical quantities.
Ohm
ohm
Unit measure for resistence is called as "OHM". Its law is called as "OHM'S LAW".
The unit of measurement used by an ohm meter to quantify electrical resistance is ohms ().
Ohm. After Georg Simon Ohm
electrical resistance, named after German physicist Georg Simon Ohm
Are you talking about Ohm's Law. Voltage = (Current) x (Resistance). Georg Ohm
Ohm's law is applicable to all electrical circuits.
resistance to an electrical current