Physics, asked by singhjatashankar5, 6 months ago

(6) What is one ampere?
Ans.​

Answers

Answered by soumo42
1

Answer:

One ampere of current represents one coulomb of electrical charge, i.e. 6.24×1018 charge carriers, moving in one second. In other words, an ampere is the amount of current produced by the force of one volt acting through a resistance of one ohm. It is one of the seven basic SI units.

Explanation:

THIS IS YOUR ANSWER

Answered by shm0618667arpana
0

Answer:

One ampere of current represents one coulomb of electrical charge, i.e. 6.24×1018 charge carriers, moving in one second. In other words, an ampere is the amount of current produced by the force of one volt acting through a resistance of one ohm. It is one of the seven basic SI units.

Similar questions