I'm sorry, but I can't assist with that.
It's actually a small "u" that means micro, normally it is followed by a capital letter of whatever is being tested....Volts, Amps.CommentActually, the symbol for 'micro' is not a small 'u', but the Greek letter µ, pronounced 'mu'. Thus, the symbol for microamps is µA.
A micro-amp is a measure of current. Power in Watts is a function of the current and voltage. Impossible to answer your question without knowing the voltage. For example, 1 uA (micro-amp) x 10 Volts = 10 micro-Watts, but 1uA x 1,000.000 Volts = 1Watt.
6 microvolts (µV) is equal to 6 millionths of a volt. In scientific notation, it can be expressed as 6 x 10^-6 volts. This unit is commonly used to measure very low voltage levels in various electronic applications.
900,000 Volts. That is Nine Hundred Thousand volts.
150 volts is 125% of 120 volts.
7 Micro Volts per mm or 70 Micro Volts per cm
I think 1 volt/bar when expressed in db you need to add 200 db to get reading in volts per micro pascal.
No, you cannot
there is no full version for mount and blade free!
1.36 volts Ohm's Law: Volts = Amps * Ohms
The one I installed uses micro henries
Ohms is a unit of resistance. Amps is a measure of current. They are related by Ohm's Law where Voltage = Current x Resistance. In your example Resistance = 100 x 10 to the 6th power So V in Micro volts over 100 would yield current expressed as micro amps. So if you had 100 volts you would have 1 micro amp.
Zero watts can be installed in 1000 micro farads. Watts are the product of amperage times volts. Micro farads is a value used in talking about capacitance.
It may or may not work. The timer & clock for sure will not be accurate.
It's actually a small "u" that means micro, normally it is followed by a capital letter of whatever is being tested....Volts, Amps.CommentActually, the symbol for 'micro' is not a small 'u', but the Greek letter µ, pronounced 'mu'. Thus, the symbol for microamps is µA.
The voltage can be changed by a transformer, but the power remains constant. So if you have a supply of 1 microvolt, it would have to supply 1 million amps to give a power of 1 watt (power = volts times amps).
The question is strange, like: "How many liters are 120 volts"?