If I remember right it is 1000 mah. 500 mah is .5 amps, 2000 mah is 2 amps and so on.
1000 milliamps (1000 ma) is equal to 1 amp or 1a. So if you mean ma, than the answer is one. But, a milliamphour, or mah, does not equal any amp or amps. That is because an amps current is instantaneous, but an amphour is an amp delivered for one hour, or 1/10th amp delivered for 10 hours.
It depends on the voltage and current ratings of the battery. Most rechargeable batteries have these values printed on them. Lets say it is 1.25 V and it is 2000 mAh. This means it can provide, ideally, 1.25 and 2 amp for 1 hour (1.25 V and 1 amp for 2 hours). I think you got the idea. So it is 1.25*2=5 Watts.
1500 mAh means 1 mA for 1500 hours or 1 amp for 1.5 hours (in theory). There is no current limit for batteries but if too much current is taken the voltage sags. For short period four times the rating can be taken, in other words 6 amps would be ok.
1OOOV at 1 Amp
1,000 milliamps = 1 amp 200 milliamps = 0.2 amp
It varies from one 9 volt battery model to another. The typical Alkaline 9 volt battery you find in many toys and smoke detectors has 565 mAh (Milliampere Hours) of power. A Zinc Carbon model has 400 mAh. A Lithium has 1200 mAh. There are 1,000 mili amps in 1 amp.
mAh or milli amp hours ... that means so many milli amps for an hour
It takes 10-12 hours to charge a 10000 mAh battery with a 5v 2.1 amp input voltage.
watt = amp * volt watt hour capacity = amp hour capacity * voltage Calculate capacity in watt hour for the one which gives you mAh capacity with the following (dividing by 1000 to convert mA to A): Wh capacity = (mAh capacity / 1000 ) * voltage - Neeraj Sharma
mAh, milliampere-hour, is used as an informal measure of energy stored in a battery - the product of the current (in mA), and how long this current can be sustained (in hours). More mAh (or Ah) is therefore better.
1000,000,000 nano-amps = 1 amp
Voltage times current is equivalent to power (watts). You need to keep in mind that milli amp hours (mAh) is amps with a unit of time - it's a specific amount of current for 1 hour. Watts is an instananeous measurement; watt hours is the equivalent you should be looking for. there is no direct conversion for watts from voltage and mAh.
56watt =56000mw1000milliamp=1ampwatt = amp x volt=watt/volt = ampif the battery is rated 11.1vso, 56000mw/11.1v=5 045.04505mah
It depends on the voltage and current ratings of the battery. Most rechargeable batteries have these values printed on them. Lets say it is 1.25 V and it is 2000 mAh. This means it can provide, ideally, 1.25 and 2 amp for 1 hour (1.25 V and 1 amp for 2 hours). I think you got the idea. So it is 1.25*2=5 Watts.
Answer #1:56watt = 56000mw,1000milliamp = 1amp,watt = amp x volt = watt/volt,if the battery is rated 11.1v,so 56000mw/11.1v = 5 045.04505mah==============================Answer #2:Answer #1 has a big ' if ' hidden in it.In general, 56 Wh = 56,000/voltage of the battery mAh and for ANY number of Wh ... call it ' P ' ...P Wh = 1,000 P/battery voltage mAh .
Milliamps Hour (mAh) is important because it's the easiest way to distinguish the strength or capacity of a battery. The higher the mAh, the longer the battery will last. Batteries with different mAh ratings are interchangeable. If your battery is rechargeable then the mAh rating is how long the battery will last per charge. Milliamps Hour is 1/1000th of a Amp Hour, so a 1000mAh = 1.0Ah Think of a cars gas tank. Voltage is how much gas is being used, and mAh is the size of the gas tank. The bigger the gas tank (mAh) rating the longer the device will run. If your battery is rechargeable, then think of the gas tank as refillable (rechargeable).
Ariana Mah is 5' 3 1/2".