| Harold Pender - Electric engineering - 1911 - 460 pages
...follows : " As a unit of electromotive force (shall be taken) the International Volt, which is the EMF 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 well for practical use by J5§3 of... | |
| Alexander Macmorran, Kenneth Mead Macmorran - Local government - 1911 - 580 pages
...of 0-00111800 of a gramme per second. The international volt is the electrical pressure which when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one international ohm will produce a current of one international ampere. And whereas it has been made to appear to the Board of Trade to be desirable... | |
| John Oren Reed, Karl Eugen Guthe - Physics - 1911 - 658 pages
...volts (355) 299. Definition of the Volt. " The international volt is the electric pressure which, when, steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere" (Art. 264). The volt is thus denned in terms of the ohm and the ampere in... | |
| George William Clarkson Kaye, Thomas Howell Laby - Chemistry - 1911 - 172 pages
...1800 gramme per second. 5. The International Volt is defined as the elect1ical pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one International Ohm, will produce a current of one International Ampere. 6. The International Watt is defined as the energy expended per second by... | |
| John Oren Reed, Karl Eugen Guther - Physics - 1911 - 314 pages
...volts (355) 299. Definition of the Volt. " The international volt is the electric pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere" (Art. 264). The volt is thus defined in terms of the oFim and the ampere... | |
| George William Clarkson Kaye, Thomas Howell Laby - Chemistry - 1911 - 172 pages
...1800 gramme per second. 5. The International Volt is defined as the electrical pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one International Ohm, will produce a current of one International Ampere. 6. The International Watt is defined as the energy expended per second by... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1911 - 1138 pages
...of 0'00111800 of a gramme per second. The International Volt is the electrical pressure which when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one International Ohm will produce a current of one International Ampere. And whereas it has been made to appear to ths Board of Trade to be desirable... | |
| John Oren Reed, Karl Eugen Guther - Physics - 1911 - 670 pages
...volts (355) 299. Definition of the Volt. " The international volt is the electric pressure which, when steadily applied to a conductor whose resistance is one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere " (Art. 264). The volt is thus denned in terms of the ohm and the ampere in... | |
| United States. National Bureau of Standards - Weights and measures - 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...international ampere, and is practically equivalent to 2 one thousand fourteen hundred and thirty-fourths of the electro-motive force between the poles or... | |
| Chemistry - 1912 - 790 pages
...Fahrenheit =252 gramme-calorie*. VOLT. The unit of electromotive force (EMF). The international volt is "the electromotive force that, steadily applied...is one international ohm, will produce a current of one international ampere, and which is reprehed sufficiently well for practical use by 1000/1434 of... | |
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