Very strong.Figure this,if a 120 volts can kill a human being then what would 650,000 do.Id say roughly this many volts could kill about 650 elephants.Does that tell you enough to stay away from it?
Kilo means 1,000 in the metric system, so 650,000 kilovolts are 650,000,000 volts.
The question is either trivial or meaningless. It's 1000 volts strong.
There are no accurate pKa value of these two, extremely STRONG acids, any value of >> 1000 (up to >> 1.0*10+9) will do.
1000. Kilo- is the prefix for 1000. So kilometres = 1000metres
There are strong electrolytes and weak and non electrolytes. There is no very strong, or pretty strong, electrolytes. If they are strong, they are strong. So, in lemons, you have salts which are strong electrolytes, and you have citric acid, which is a weak electrolyte.
1000 kg, since 1 g = 1 mL and thus 1000 kg = 1000 L.
If you mean strong acids then yes, strong acids are strong electrolytes.
1000
Kilovolt or 1000 volts. 1KV is 1000 volts, 2KV is 2000 volts. Kilo stands for 1000.
The prefix, 'milli', literally means 1/1000. Just like a millimeter is 1/1000th of a meter. So replace milli with 1/1000 and you have the answer in volts. For example, 583 millivolts = 583 x 1/1000 volts =583/1000 volts = 0.583 volts.
Ohms and volts are different things -- it's not possible to equate ohms to volts.
1.0 kilo volts = 1000 volts1000 effective volts is 1kV.
Kilo means 1000 so there are 12,000 volts in 12 Kilovolts
999 Volts A Kilovolt is 1000 volts.
13,800 volts 1 kv = 1 kilovolt = 1000 volts
1 kW = 1000 watts. Formula is Watts = Amps x Volts. As you can see to give you a answer I need a value for volts. Transpose the formula to read I = 1000/volts.
The word kilo equates to 1000.
Amps * volts / 1000
Kilovolt = 1000 volts.