There's an extra "per second" in the question. One "kilogram-meter per second squared" is one "newton".
One mile per hour is equal to 0.447 meters per second.
For waves the unit of one wave cycle per second is Hertz
One gallon per minute is 0.267 cups per second. Therefore, 3.5 gallons per minute = 3.5 x 0.267 = about one (0.9345) cup per second.
You have an extra "per second" there. The proper measurement for force is: kg * m/s2, more commonly referred to as Newtons. This means that the force needed to get your one kilogram mass up to a speed of one meter per second within a single second (assuming no friction, initial momentum, or other external factors), would be exactly that: one Newton. * * * * * "per second per second" is an alternative form of "/s2" so there was no extra "per second".
one per second per amp.
There is no way to answer that. A watt is one volt times one amp. A hertz is one cycle per second. There is no correlation between them.There is no way to answer that. A watt is one volt times one amp. A hertz is one cycle per second. There is no correlation between them.
The unit of current is the ampere (A), or amp for short. A thousandth of an amp is a milliamp (mA). One amp is equal to one coulomb of charge per second.
The unit of current is the ampere (A), or amp for short. A thousandth of an amp is a milliamp (mA). One amp is equal to one coulomb of charge per second.
An amp is a measure of electric current flow. The amp is a coulomb per second past a given point. (A fancy way of saying it is that a coulomb of charge per second entering and leaving a node is an amp.)
The unit of measure for electron flow per second is the Amp. It takes 6.2 E18 electrons per second to make one Ampere.
No. One amp is one amp. It does not matter how long you supply that current. You could say that one amp for 100 hours is 360,000 coulombs, but that is not a useful piece of information.Now, if you want to talk about energy, that is a different story, but you need to talk about watts, not amps.One amp is one coulomb per second.One volt is one joule per coulomb.One watt is one joule per second, which is why watts is amps times volts.One watt for 100 hours is 100 watt-hours, or 360,000 joules. Joules is energy. That is useful information.
One ampere (1 amp) is defined as the flow of 1 coulomb of charge per second through a conductor. This means that if a current of 1 amp is flowing in a wire, it indicates that 1 coulomb of charge is passing through a cross-section of the wire every second.
One hertz is one cycle per second... A megahertz is 1 million cycles per second
The ampere is defined in terms of the force between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors.A current of one ampere flowing for one second will transport a charge of one coulomb. So a coulomb is an ampere second. Transposing this confirms that an ampere is equivalent to (not 'defined' as) a coulomb per second.
The basic unit of electric current is the ampere (A). It is defined as the flow of one coulomb of electric charge per second.
One ohm is equivalent to one volt per amp.