Milli amp or Milli-ampere is a measurement of current. The base unit is Ampere or amp and the Milli amp is 1/1000th of an amp.CommentThe correct spelling is milliampere -no hyphen!
To convert millivolts to milliamps, you need to know the resistance in the circuit. If the resistance is known, you can use Ohm's Law (V = IR) to calculate the current. Without the resistance value, you cannot directly convert millivolts to milliamps.
1 amp is larger than 1 milliamp. 1 amp is equivalent to 1000 milliamps.
mA stands for milli-Amps. It is an electrical current of 1/1000 of an amp.
There are 1000 microamps in one milliamp. Each derived SI unit in each direction is three decimal places as in all engineering form.
Milli- is not an abbreviation; it is a prefix which means one thousandth. For example, a millimeter is a thousandth of a meter, a milliamp is a thousandth of an amp, and a milligram is a thousandth of a gram.
To measure very low amperage a milli amp meter would be used or the milli amp scale on a multi meter.
The abbreviation amp is short of ampere, which is a unit of measurement named after a scientist.
Milli amp or Milli-ampere is a measurement of current. The base unit is Ampere or amp and the Milli amp is 1/1000th of an amp.CommentThe correct spelling is milliampere -no hyphen!
To convert millivolts to milliamps, you need to know the resistance in the circuit. If the resistance is known, you can use Ohm's Law (V = IR) to calculate the current. Without the resistance value, you cannot directly convert millivolts to milliamps.
1 amp is larger than 1 milliamp. 1 amp is equivalent to 1000 milliamps.
Mili amp is mA. Amps, Watts, Bels, Ohms and Volts are always capitalized because they are names/abbreviations of proper names, whereas milli, mega, deci, etc. are measurement quantities and should not be capitalized.
No, your universal alternating current direct current adapter will not mess up your electronic product. The rating that you find on the adapter is the maximum amount that you can draw from the device without damaging it. It is not like there is a surplus of current waiting to be used. The amount of current draw that it can produce is governed by the load demand. What you don't want to do is connect a device to the adapter that has a load higher that the rating of the adapter. Usually you can find the rating on the adapter rated in milli amps (ma) along with the output voltage. Also the load device will have what the amp draw is, also in milli amps.
mA stands for milli-Amps. It is an electrical current of 1/1000 of an amp.
uA, means Micro-Amp or 1 millionth of an Ampere mA, means milli-Amp or 1 thousandth of an Ampere. An Ampere is a unit measurement of electric current flowing in a circuit.
Amp, Amperes is current. Volt, and any variation, is tension. There's no direct translation between them.
mAh or milli amp hours ... that means so many milli amps for an hour