Ohm's Law states that the current through the conductor is directly proportional to the potential difference between its ends provided its temperature and other physical conditions remain constant
Voltage equals Current times Resistance. Volts = Current x Resistance V = I x R
ohms law babe voltage,current & resistance
Amps and volts are not the same, but related by Ohm's Law. Volts = Amps x Ohms. Ohms is a measure of resistance. Given .01 amps you would have to know resistance to calculate volts.
Use Ohms formulas or laws: Amps = Watts divided by voltage or in this case: 720/120=6 amps. See "Ohms law formulas" on the web.
Because one shouldn't be messing around with electricity until one understands the basics.
The ohm is the unit of electrical resistance to current flow. More ohms (more resistance), the less current will flow. Less ohms (less resistance), the more current will flow. One ohm is defined as the amount of resistance that will cause one ampere of current to flow if the supply voltage is one volt. Ohm's law states that amps = volts / ohms So, if you had a 12 volt battery, and you connected a load, say a heating element that had a resistance of 3 ohms, how much current would flow in the circuit? amps = 12 volts / 3 ohms amps = 4
ohms law.
imitation of ohms law is that it can be applied only to linear devices it cannot be allowed to non linear devices...
To find the conductance using ohms law,you take the inverse of the resistance(/R)
The Ohm's law is defined as voltage propositional to current. The equation given by V=IR R IS THE PROPOSITIONAL CONSTANT
Current
No.
no
No. Ohm's law relates voltage, current and resistance: V=IR. ("I" is the symbol for current.)
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
Ohms law does not consider inductance
no
Ohms law.