Definition of Nanoamperes. Meaning of Nanoamperes. Synonyms of Nanoamperes

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Nanoamperes. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Nanoamperes and, of course, Nanoamperes synonyms and on the right images related to the word Nanoamperes.

Definition of Nanoamperes

No result for Nanoamperes. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Nanoamperes from wikipedia

- 103 A kA kiloampere 10−6 A μA microampere 106 A MA megaampere 10−9 A nA nanoampere 109 A GA gigaampere 10−12 A pA picoampere 1012 A TA teraampere 10−15 A...
- characterizes a range of angles in an optical system nA, the symbol for nanoampere Naturally aspirated engine Na (tree) or Mesua ferrea, a species of tree...
- scales of less than a nanosecond and if we were to have a current of 16 nanoamperes that would amount to only 100 electrons p****ing every nanosecond. According...
- potential differences in the kilovolt range, but current output in the nanoampere range. The famous Oxford Electric Bell, which has been ringing continuously...
- the ring (green stars) without dissipation. A typical ring current is 1 nanoampere for a ring diameter of 0.6 micrometer at a temperature below 0.5 kelvin...
- example based on Ohm's law: A voltage of 10 mV is generated by p****ing 10 nanoamperes of current across 1 MΩ of resistance. The electrometer changes this "high...
- produced an electron beam diameter of 1-3 μm with a beam current of ~10 nanoamperes (nA) and used a Geiger counter to detect the X-rays produced from the...
- beams with very small energy spread. A modern FIB can deliver tens of nanoamperes of current to a sample, or can image the sample with a spot size on the...
- configuration is described or ****umed from the circuit. Typically ~10 nanoamperes, nA, for bipolar op amps, tens of picoamperes, pA, for JFET input stages...
- density ion beam with a small energy spread and can deliver tens of nanoamperes of current to a sample with a spot size of a few nanometers. Swanson...