Resistance is Volts over Current
11 Ohm = 110Volt / 10 Amp
Voltage = (current) x (resistance) Current = (voltage)/(resistance) Resistance = (voltage)/(current)
If running at 110V, that is 10Amps. Wattage = Voltage x Current Current = Wattage / Voltage - Neeraj Sharma
If resistance is high that time the current flow is low. Bcoz current always flow through the low resistance path.
1). Voltage = (resistance) x (current)2). Current = (voltage) / (resistance)3). Resistance = (voltage) / (current)I think #2 is Ohm's original statement, but any one of these can be massaged algebraicallyin order to derive the other two.
Ohm's Law: V = IR (voltage = current times resistance).Ohm's Law: V = IR (voltage = current times resistance).Ohm's Law: V = IR (voltage = current times resistance).Ohm's Law: V = IR (voltage = current times resistance).
well, it depends on the individual. IIRC, 240volt Residual Current Device (AKA ELCB) designed to protect life operate at 60mA which requires a 'simple' body resistance of 4000 ohms. However, this doesn't take account of AC resistance (includes capacitive and reactive impedance) which is dependant on frequency! So, at 110v DC (you don't mention AC or DC voltage) a body resistance of below 2000 would result in a potentially lethal current ... I wouldn't want to test it however - I've had two 240v AC shocks and, to be honest, that's enough. I've 'felt' 110v AC 60Hz and also 110v AC 400Hz - the 400Hz definatly cought my attention .....
Ohms law is: I = V / R (current = voltage / resistance)... where if the voltage or resistance changes then the current will change. ... the current and resistance is a inversely proportional linearly relationship ...this means that if the resistance doubles then the current halfs, if the resistance halfs then the current doubles, etc...hope this helps
Ohms Law: V = IR (or equivalently, I = V/R) if voltage is held constant, then when resistance goes up, current goes down, and vice-versa. Say for instance, the voltage is 10 Volts, and resistance is 5 Ohms. That means the current is 2 Amps. (2 = 10/5) If the resistance is raised to 10 Ohms, then the current drops to 1 Amp. (10 = 10/1)
Should be ok provided you do not draw too much current.
10
10 volts applied to 5 ohms would cause a current flow of 2 amperes. Current = voltage divided by resistance.
469.4 * 10^3
Voltage = (current) x (resistance) Current = (voltage)/(resistance) Resistance = (voltage)/(current)
Voltage = (current) x (resistance) Current = (voltage)/(resistance) Resistance = (voltage)/(current)
By Ohm's Law Voltage = Current x Resistance R = V / I = 120 / 12 = 10 Ohms
I believe its like this but don't take my word for granted: R (resistance) = V (voltage) / I (amperes) The formula is R = V/I R = 110V / 10A R = ? R = 110/10 = 11 R = 11Ω Ω= omhs Hope this helped but as I said I'm not completely sure
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.