DC definitely, all car batteries - all batteries.
Batteries are DC
No, auto batteries are DC not AC.
Direct current
You cannot power a home with car batteries. Batteries are DC voltage. Your home operates on AC voltage. You could use a converter but the number of batteries required to operate an average home would be enormous.
No, batteries provide DC power.
All Batteries are DC or Direct Current.
No. AA batteries are DC to begin with. The equipment in question may have an AC power jack, though.
Batteries produce DC because the potential difference is determined by the chemical reaction inside the battery. This voltage is constant.
An AC-DC converter you can operate a device on AC instead of batteries. ~bobbyjack~ : D
Batteries store DC, or Direct Current. The correct term for AC is Alternating Current.
AC - Alternating Current, same thing that comes out of a wall socket DC - Direct Current, batteries. <<>> When a device has AC/DC on its name plate, it can work off either of the two voltages. Many portable radios have this function. When the radio is plugged into AC, the voltage is transformed to the working DC voltage and then rectified to a DC voltage. When the radio is on battery operation, the radio operated strictly from the DC voltage supplied by the batteries. The change between voltages from AC to DC or DC to AC is almost instantaneously. This change over is done through an AC powered relay in the radio. When the AC held in relay looses its supply it de energizes and switches over to DC power if the batteries are in the radio. With batteries in the radio try it. Plug into the AC supply, turn on the radio that has batteries installed in it, unplug the AC supply and the radio will not miss a beat.