There are zero kilowatts in amps. A voltage value has to be supplied before an answer can be given. I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts = 12000/Volts.
Alternatively, you could state the resistance, from which the amps are determined from P/R = I2.
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Twelve kilowatts is zero amps. Watts is the product of amps times volts. Without the voltage the wattage can not be calculated.
If the 100 amps is powered by 10 volts, you have 1 kw, or 1000 watts. watts = volts X current The 'k' simply means kilo, or thousand.
Depends on power factor, but it should be about 8 Amps.
There is one part of the question missing. To find an answer the kW of the heater must be stated. Then the equations used are, to change kW to watts, Kw/1000 = watts. Once that is found then use, I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts. This will give you the value in amperage of the heater.
kV is kilovolts, kW is kilowatts, kVA is kilovolt amps and kVAR is kilovolt-amps reactive. A common formula is kVA-squared = kW-squared + kVAR-squared.
There are zero amps in 32 kWh. Watts are the product of amps times volts. Without stating what the voltage is, this calculation can not be made. I = W/E is the formula to find amperage but there has to be a time constant if kWh is used. Usually the question is asked as to how many amps are in 32 kW.