The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
If a 1.5 volt battery is replaced by a 9 volt battery in a circuit, the current flowing through the circuit will likely increase. This is because the higher voltage of the 9 volt battery will provide more electromotive force, pushing more current through the circuit, assuming the resistance remains the same.
No current bro? Depends
A 'volt ampere' (not 'volt amp'!) is the unit for theapparent power of a load in an a.c. circuit. It is simply the product of the supply voltage and the load current.
Yes, a 230V bulb can be used on a 120V circuit, but the power output of the bulb will be approximately one quarter. (Half the voltage and half the current) Note, however, that since the bulb will be cooler, the resistance will be slightly less, so power will be somewhat higher than expected, but estimated figure is still one quarter.
The current in a 7200 volt line depends on the power being drawn and the resistance of the circuit. Using Ohm's Law (I = V/R), where I is the current, V is the voltage (7200 volts), and R is the resistance, you can calculate the amperage based on the specific conditions of the circuit.
by a volt meter / ameter
If a 1.5 volt battery is replaced by a 9 volt battery in a circuit, the current flowing through the circuit will likely increase. This is because the higher voltage of the 9 volt battery will provide more electromotive force, pushing more current through the circuit, assuming the resistance remains the same.
480 volts and 60ohm impedence current = volt/impedence current=480/60 current=8ampeares
If you are talking about a 6 volt coil, yes, so long as the contacts are rated for the 230 volt circuit. If you are talking about 6 volt contacts, no, absolutely not.
If a 9.0 volt battery is connected to a 4.0-ohm and 5.0-ohm resistor connected in series, the current in the circuit is 1.0 amperes. If a 9.0 volt battery is connected to a 4.0-ohm and 5.0-ohm resistor connected in parallel, the current in the circuit is 0.5 amperes.
expecto patronum! ~:)
Current will go up by a factor of 6 times in that scenario.
See discuss.
Not enough information. To answer this question the amount of current in AMPS the circuit is drawing is needed.
resistance = volt / current . 440 volt across a parallel circuit means the same 440 volt across both resistance s. hence resistance r = volt / current . 440 / 20 amp = 27.5 ohms total resistance
No current bro? Depends
A volt can not be connected to a circuit.