A: 18volts / 3ohms = 6amps
The formula you are looking for is I = E/R. Amps = Volts/Resistance.
Ohm's Law: Voltage = Amperes times Resistance 9 volts = amps * 10 ohms amps = .9
W = A x V. Watts = Amps x Volts. There is not a voltage stated to multiply the 6 amps with so an answer can not be given.
About 11,000
"Volts" is electrical pressure applied to a circuit; whereas, "ohms" is electrical resistance to that pressure. One cannot determine ohms from voltage without knowing either the current (in "amps") or power (in "watts"). A normal 120V household circuit can handle a maximum of 20 amps, so using ohm's law of resistance = voltage / current, the minimum resistance required in a 120V household circuit would be 6 ohms. Any less than 6 ohms will cause the circuit breaker to trip.
You use Ohm's Law to make your calculation. Volts = Amps x Resistance Amps = Volts / Resistance
Use Ohm's Law: V = IR (voltage = current times resistance).
The amperage in the circuit can be calculated using Ohm's Law: Amperage = Voltage / Resistance. Plugging in the values, we get Amperage = 110V / 7ohms = 15.71A. Therefore, the circuit would have approximately 15.71 amps of current flowing through it.
The formula you are looking for is I = E/R. Amps = Volts/Resistance.
If E=I x R then it would require 1232 volts to push 16 amps through a 77 ohm resistance.
Just use Ohm's Law Voltage = Current x Resistance Amps = Voltage Divided By Resistance Amps = 120 / 260
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.
Volts and amps are related according to Ohm's law where volts are equal to amps multiplied by resistance. Amps alone won't tell you how much voltage you have. 2.5 amps could have 1 volt or 200 volts it will depend on how much resistance the 2.5 amps sees.AnswerThere are no volts in amperes. They measure different quantities. Your question is like asking, "How many kilometres are there in 2.5 kilograms?" In other words, it is nonesense!
To calculate volts, you also need to know the resistance (ohms) in the circuit according to Ohm's Law. The formula to find volts is V = I x R, where V is voltage, I is current in amps, and R is resistance in ohms. So, to determine volts given 0.01 amps, you'd need the resistance value.
There are zero watts in 240 volts. To determine watts, an amperage or a resistance must be supplied. W = Amps x Volts, W = Amps (squared) x Resistance (in Ohms), or W = Voltage (squared)/Resistance.
voltage is equal to resistance multiplyed by current. you have the 2 pieces of info, just multiply
Any value - you must supply the resistance.