| 1912 - 810 pages
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| United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1912 - 590 pages
...unit ot electromotive Third. The unit of electro-motive force shall be what is known r>a* t ag ^ie international volt, which is the electro-motive force...is one international ohm, will produce a current of an international ampere, and is practically equivalent to 2 one thousand fourteen hundred and thirty-fourths... | |
| John Conrad Hemmeter - 1912 - 274 pages
...the volt. It is about the amount of electricity produced by one Daniell cell. It equals the EMF which steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...one international ohm will produce a current of one ampere. Voltage is that which tends to move a current over a conductor. Amperage is that which is moved.... | |
| Anthony Zeleny, Henry Anton Erikson - 1912 - 282 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. 4. The International Watt is the energy expended per second by an unvarying electric current of one... | |
| Otto Luhr - 1913 - 952 pages
...eighteen millionths of a gram per second. Third. The unit of electromotive force shall be what is known as the international volt, which is the electromotive...is one international ohm, will produce a current of an international ampere, and is practically equivalent to one thousand fourteen hundred and thirty-fourths... | |
| 1913 - 414 pages
...of a gram per second. Electromotive Force. The unit of electromotive force shall be what is known as the international volt, which is the electromotive...is one international ohm, will produce a current of an international ampere, and is practically equivalent to of the electromotive force between the poles... | |
| Karl Eugen Guthe - 1913 - 136 pages
...96). It is called a volt. The international volt is the electric difference of potential which when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is...will produce a current of one international ampere. For all practical purposes it is sufficiently well represented by the 1.0183th part of the EMF of a... | |
| 1914 - 410 pages
...itself can be deduced. " In employing the silver voltameter to measure currents of about one ampère, the following arrangements should be adopted : —...represented sufficiently well for practical use by -^Jf of the electromotive force between the poles or electrodes of the voltaic cell known as Clark's... | |
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