Ohm

[ohm] /oʊm/
noun
1.
Georg Simon
[gey-awrk zee-mawn] /geɪˈɔrk ˈzi mɔn/ (Show IPA),
1787–1854, German physicist.
British Dictionary definitions for georg simon ohm

ohm

/əʊm/
noun
1.
the derived SI unit of electrical resistance; the resistance between two points on a conductor when a constant potential difference of 1 volt between them produces a current of 1 ampere Ω
Word Origin
C19: named after Georg Simon Ohm

Ohm

/əʊm/
noun
1.
Georg Simon (ˈɡeːɔrk ˈziːmɔn). 1787–1854, German physicist, who formulated the law named after him
Word Origin and History for georg simon ohm

ohm

n.

unit of electrical resistance, 1867, in recognition of German physicist Georg S. Ohm (1789-1854), who determined the law of the flow of electricity. Originally proposed as ohma (1861) as a unit of voltage. Related: ohmage; ohmic; ohmeter.

georg simon ohm in Medicine

ohm (ōm)
n.
Symbol Ω
A unit of electrical resistance equal to that of a conductor in which a current of one ampere is produced by a potential of one volt across its terminals.

georg simon ohm in Science
ohm
  (ōm)   
The SI derived unit used to measure the electrical resistance of a material or an electrical device. One ohm is equal to the resistance of a conductor through which a current of one ampere flows when a potential difference of one volt is applied to it.
Ohm, Georg Simon 1789-1854.  
German physicist who discovered the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance in an electrical circuit, now known as Ohm's law. The ohm unit of electrical resistance is named for him.
georg simon ohm in Culture
ohm [(ohm)]

The unit of electrical resistance, named after the nineteenth-century German physicist Georg Ohm.

georg simon ohm in Technology

person
(1789-1854) A German physicist who became Professor of Physics at Munich University, after whom the unit of electrical resistance was named.
(2003-12-02)

Encyclopedia Article for georg simon ohm

ohm

abbreviation Omega, unit of electrical resistance in the metre-kilogram-second system, named in honour of the 19th-century German physicist Georg Simon Ohm. It is equal to the resistance of a circuit in which a potential difference of one volt produces a current of one ampere (1Omega = 1 V/A); or, the resistance in which one watt of power is dissipated when one ampere flows through it. Ohm's law (q.v.) states that resistance equals the ratio of the potential difference to current, and the ohm, volt, and ampere are the respective fundamental units used universally for expressing quantities.

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