ampeeriä
Ampeeriä is the Finnish partitive form of ampeeri, the SI unit of electric current. The ampere, symbol A, measures the rate of flow of electric charge in a circuit. In modern definitions, one ampere is the current that, if carried by two parallel conductors of infinite length and negligible resistance, would produce a force between the conductors equal to 2×10^-7 newtons per meter of length. Since 2019, the ampere is defined by fixing the elementary charge e to exactly 1.602176634×10^-19 coulombs, making one ampere equal to one coulomb per second.
The unit is named after the French physicist André-Marie Ampère, a foundational figure in electromagnetism. In
Applications and context follow the general role of the ampere in science and engineering. It is used
Related concepts include the coulomb (unit of electric charge), the volt (potential difference), and fundamental constants