As a unit of electromotive force, the international volt, which is the electromotive force that, steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere, and which is represented sufficiently... Wire in Electrical Construction - Page 15by John A. Roebling's Sons Company - 1897 - 73 pagesFull view - About this book
| Charles Vickery Drysdale, Alfred Charles Jolley - Electric measurements - 1924 - 466 pages
...V=RI, we have the International volt : " The International volt is the electrical pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...will produce a current of one International ampere." Electromotive Force. — Whenever a current flows through a circuit a certain total driving force or... | |
| Arthur Whitmore Smith - Electric measurements - 1924 - 366 pages
...0.00111800 of a gram per second. VIII. The International Volt is the electrical pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...will produce a current of one International Ampere. IX. The International Watt is the energy expended per second by an unvarying electric current of one... | |
| John Willoughby Meares, Reginald E. Neale - Electric engineering - 1924 - 652 pages
...001 118 00 of a gramme per second. The International Volt (V) is the electrical pressure which when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...will produce a current of one International Ampere. These definitions are further expanded in the Order in Council, where the particular standards and... | |
| Harry Cooke Cushing - Electric wiring - 1925 - 460 pages
...International volt, as denned by the International Electrical Congress, which met in Chicago in 1893, "is the electromotive force that, steadily applied...ampere, and which is represented sufficiently well for 1,000 practical use by of the electromotive force be1,434 tween the poles of the voltaic cell, known... | |
| Le Roy Dougherty Weld, Frederic Palmer - Physics - 1925 - 760 pages
...cell. given. The London Conference denned the international volt as " the electric pressure which when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...will produce a current of one international ampere." Two years later an International Technical Committee met in Washington and determined the EMF of the... | |
| British Standards Institution - Electric engineering - 1926 - 272 pages
...being the potential difference, which, when steadily applied to a conductor, the resistance of which is one International Ohm, will produce a current of one International Ampere. 1519 WATT. A practical unit of power. It is the amount of energy expended per second by an unvarying... | |
| American Electrochemical Society - Chemistry - 1904 - 310 pages
...accordance with accompanying specifications, deposits silver at the rate of 0.001118 gramme per second. "As a unit of electromotive force, the international...represented sufficiently well for practical use by 1,000/1,434 of the electromotive force between the poles or electrodes of the voltaic cell known as... | |
| Hugh Stott Taylor - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1927 - 558 pages
...Ohm's law as the electric pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor the resistance of which is one International Ohm, will produce a current of one International Ampere. If a conductor of length L cm. and uniform cross section A sq. cm. has a resistance R, then r — RA/L... | |
| United States. Adjutant-General's Office - 1928 - 600 pages
...legal value of the volt ; the electromotive force that, applied to a conductor having a resistance of one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere, and represented by \1\\ of the EM F between the poles of the voltaic cell, known as Clark's cell, at a... | |
| John Hereward Reyner - Radio - 1928 - 496 pages
...Volt is the electrical pressure, which, when steadily applied to a conductor the resistance of which is one International ohm, will produce a current of one International ampere. The EMF of a Weston Normal Cell at 20° C. is 1-0183 International Volts, and that of a Clark Cell... | |
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