Ec21
(12/3) Tan-1 = 75.96o ?
R = sqrt (52 + 122) = 13 ?
13 Sin (x+76o)
I'd double check elsewhere though
Wiki User
∙ 11y agolll
Use Ohm's law. V = I * R where V is voltage in volts, I is current in amperes, and R is resistance in ohms.
A multimeter measures current in amperes and potential difference in volts. Wattmeters are used to measure watts and the reading is a combination of current being drawn and the voltage applied. watt = volts x amps
Amperes are a unit of electrical current flow, in coulombs per second. Volts are a unit of electrical potential difference, in joules per coulomb. The two units can not be converted without some intervening device characteristic such as resistance or power.
Current = charge/time = 10/5 = 2 amperes
110 v
Volts; The Ampere is the unit for current in charge per second.
No, electric current is actually measured in amperes (amps), not volts. Volts measure the difference in electric potential between two points, while amperes measure the flow rate of electric current.
lll
The ratio of potential difference to current in a circuit is known as resistance, measured in ohms (Ω). This relationship is described by Ohm's Law, which states that resistance equals voltage divided by current (R = V/I).
"1,000 ohms" is the resistance of anything through which the current, expressed in amperes, is numerically equal to 0.001 times the potential difference between its terminals, expressed in volts.
No, the unit of electric current is the ampere (A). The volt (V) is the unit of electric potential difference or voltage.
It depends on how much current it's putting out. An inverter rated at 800 volt-amperes can deliver 220 volts at 3.636 amperes, or it can deliver 110 volts at 3.727 amperes.
To calculate the amperes, you can use the formula: Amperes = Power (kVA) / Voltage. In this case, it would be 400 kVA / 220 V = 1818.18 Amperes approximately.
it is impossible to convert volts into amperes, because there are two different units of measurement. Volts refers, as you know, to voltage, or the electric potential difference between two points, and amperes refers to the current, or the intensity of the electric current. Its like trying to convert horses into donkeys.
The name given by engineers to the ratio of "electrical potential difference" (expressed in volts) to "rate of current flow" (expressed in amperes) is "resistance" (expressed in ohms).
No, electric current is measured in amperes (A), not volts. Volts measure electric potential or voltage difference.