yes
Because the door has less potential energy than your hand that transfers it and that's why.
Static Discharge:Perhaps you see a spark jump between your hand and the doorknob. The spark is an example of an electric discharge. An electric discharge is the movement of static charge from one place to another. The spark you saw was the result of a static charge moving between your hand and the doorknob.
the force would be equal
4000 Newtons Newtons 3rd Law- every force applied has an egual and opposite reaction force so 4000n to the board=4000n force to the hand
force
There are 2 screws on the interior part of the doorknob they should be hand tight with a screwdriver and that should do it.
Hand to door knob
an electric discharge ******************* Static electricity.
Because the door has less potential energy than your hand that transfers it and that's why.
she will blow her finger off with static electricity. trust me im a docter
The adhesive was very strong and dried almost instantly, which was bad because it connected my hand to a doorknob.
Static Discharge:Perhaps you see a spark jump between your hand and the doorknob. The spark is an example of an electric discharge. An electric discharge is the movement of static charge from one place to another. The spark you saw was the result of a static charge moving between your hand and the doorknob.
You hold the doorknob with one hand and a live wire with the other, you moron.
Force the Hand of Chance was created in 1982.
stick your left arm out of the window
it all depends on how hard you lift of push your hand.
because electrical charge builds up otherwise know as static electricity