Ohm's Law Calculator
The Ohm's Law Calculator computes power(watts), potential (volts), resistance (ohms) and current (amps) based on the three variants of Ohm's Law. The calculator has automatic unit conversions of inputs and outputs.
Power: (watts, milliwatts, kilowatts, horsepower)
- P = I • V: This computes the power (watts) as a function of current (amps) and potential (volts).
- P = R • I²: This computes the power (watts) as a function of current (amps) and resistance (ohms).
- P = V² / R: This computes the power (watts) as a function of potential (volts) and resistance (ohms).
Potential: (volts, millivolts)
- V = I • R : This computes the potential (volts) as a function of current (amps) and resistance (ohms).
- V = P / I: This computes the potential (volts) as a function of power (watts) and current (amps).
- V = √(P • R) : This computes the potential (volts) as a function of power (watts) and resistance (ohms).
Resistance: (ohms, milliohms, kiloohms)
- R = V²/P: This computes the resistance (ohms) as a function of potential (volts) and power (watts).
- R = P / I² : This computes the resistance (ohms) as a function of power (watts) and current (amps).
- R = V / I : This computes the resistance (ohms) as a function of potential (volts) and current (amps).
Current: (amps, milliamps, microamps, gilberts)
- I = V / R: This computes the current (amps) as a function of potential (volts) and resistance (ohms).
- I = P / V : This computes the current (amps) as a function of the power (watts) and the potential (volts).
- I = √(P/R): This computes the current (amps) as a function of the power (watts) and the resistance (ohms).
The Math / Science
Ohm's Law states that the electric current through an electric conductor between two points is directly proportional to the potential difference (voltage) across the two points. As an equation this is simply I = V/R.
Ohm's Law established relations between potential (voltage), current, resistance and power. See wheel graphic.
The law was named after the German physicist Georg Ohm.
REFERENCE
[1] Ohm's Law Source: Wikipedia: URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm%27s_law
Public License: CC Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International
Equations
- Voltage from Current and Resistance Use Equation
- Voltage from Current and Power Use Equation
- Voltage from Power and Resistance Use Equation
- Current from Potential and Power Use Equation
- Current from Power and Resistance Use Equation
- Current from Potential and Resistance Use Equation
- Resistance from Power and Potential Use Equation
- Resistance from Power and Current Use Equation
- Resistance from Potential and Current Use Equation
- Power from Current and Voltage Use Equation
- Power from Resistance and Current Use Equation
- Power from Voltage and Resistance Use Equation