Amps measure the current flow so they flow all the time whether it's a minute or an hour, until they are switched off.
A solar panel generates watts, that is volts times amps, so if the panel were a 20-volt panel the current would be 2 amps.
Amperes per hour doesn't make sense. Ampere is a unit of current, not of energy. If a device uses a certain amount of amperes, or milliamperes, it will use that current all the time while it is turned on, not "per hour".
It is 0.00015 Amperes. -Abhiraj Chauhan (abhirajchauhan@gmail.com)
The human beings have the ability to tolerate about 0.007 Amperes.
6 amperes
A 300 ampere-hour battery can supply 300 amperes for somewhat less, sometimes substantially less, than one hour. It might not even be rated to provide 300 amperes at all. It depends on the battery. The reason for this is that ampere-hour ratings are, by definition, normalized to an eight-hour rate. This means that you can pull 300/8, or 37.5 amperes from that battery for 8 hours. That is the reference point. If you were, for instance, to pull 18.75 amperes, you would expect the battery to last somewhat longer than 16 hours, and if you pulled 75 amperes, you would expect the to last somewhat less than 4 hours, both from a full charge, and both from a recently equalized state. You need to check the published discharge curve for the batter to know for sure.
I am not sure what you mean, but ampere is a unit of current, not of energy. In the case of a constant current, if the current is 1 ampere in a second, it will be 1 ampere in an hour, or in a day.
Since kilo- means one thousand, there are one thousand amperes in a kilo-ampere, and there are 0.001 amperes in a kilo-ampere.
There are 0.000001 million amperes in 1 ampere.
Mega is a prefix for million, so there are 1 million amperes in a megampere
10
Amperes is a measurement of electrical flow and has NO relationship to Nautical Miles, or any length.
Since kilo- means one thousand, there are one thousand amperes in a kilo-ampere, and there are 0.001 amperes in a kilo-ampere.