Ohm's Law says Voltage = Current x Resistance.
Hence, if you know ohms = 10 you need to know the current passing through the resistance to know the voltage drop across the resistance. If there were 1 Amp flowing through resistance, you would have 1 x 10 = 10 Volts.
A 'volt' is used to measure potential difference, whereas the 'ohm' is used to measure resistance. These are two completely different quantities, so you cannot convert one to the other, any more than you can convert kilograms to kilometres!
doesn't work like that. For a current of 1 amps through a resistance of 1 Ohm you get a voltage drop of 1 volts. Volts = resistance x current.
The same, 1 ohm = 1 volt/ampere.
12 volts is equal to how many mv
This requires there to be two voltages, which are either equal or not equal.
One statvolt is about 300 volts. (299.792458)
20 millivolts
15
12 volts is equal to how many mv
12kv is equal to 12000 volt.(12*1000).
3 Kv = 3,000 volts.
This requires there to be two voltages, which are either equal or not equal.
One statvolt is about 299.8 volts.
One statvolt is about 300 volts. (299.792458)
20 millivolts
1 volt is equal to 0.01 hectovolt. Therefore, there are 100 volts in one hectovolt
0.14
15
A voltage of 13.8 kV is equal to 13,800 volts.
Zero volts equal one watt. Watts is the product of amps times volts. Without an amperage the voltage can not be calculated. The time constant has nothing to do with the equation.