milliampere, as with any unit with milli in front is 1000 times smaller
On comparing ampere and milliampere . we can tell the relation between them as follows. 1 amp =1000000 mamp.
One ampere = one coulomb every second .
The unit of electrical current is Ampere, or 'Amps' for short.
An ampere is defined as the charge passing through a point in a circuit per second. In other words, one ampere is equivalent to one coulomb of charge passing through a point in a circuit in one second.
Ampere.
On comparing ampere and milliampere . we can tell the relation between them as follows. 1 amp =1000000 mamp.
A milliampere.
milliampere i also wondered upon this question however, it was soon explained in a lesson and months later came up in a test asking this exact question - i chose milliampere and soon founded that it was correct thanks by oxford university student
1 ampere = 1000 milliamperes
milli______ = one thousandth. So 1 mA = 0.001 A
Yes. To convert from ampere to milliampere, multiply by 1000.
Ampere, milliampere, microampere, nanoampere, picoampere.
The 2 units for measuring current are: Ampere Milliampere
This refers to a battery rating (laptop in this case) Ah is ampere-hour and mAh is milliampere-hour. A milliampere-hour is one-thousandth of an ampere-hour (3.6 coulomobs) so 4400mAh would equal 4.4Ah which means it would not last as long as 4.6Ah. Thanks Wikipedia.
No, a milliampere (mA) and a milliampere-hour (mAh) are not the same. A milliampere is a unit of electrical current, representing one-thousandth of an ampere, while a milliampere-hour is a unit of electric charge, measuring how much current flows over time. Specifically, mAh indicates the capacity of a battery to deliver a certain current over an hour. For example, a battery rated at 1000 mAh can theoretically provide 1000 mA for one hour before being depleted.
There are 1,000,000 micro amps in one amp.
An ampere (A) is larger than a milliampere (mA). Specifically, 1 ampere is equal to 1,000 milliamperes. Therefore, if you compare the two, the ampere represents a greater unit of electrical current.