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No. You can split the hot feeds and you can split the neutral feed, but both outlets of a standard duplex receptacle share the ground.
Yes, they can share a neutral
False, all that is needed for separation is 6 inches.
a molecule
No they must be seperated.
A neutral particle formed when atoms share electrons?
The neutral sub-atomic particles in an atom are neutrons and they are found inside the nucleus.
Many outlets have small tabs between the terminal screws that can be broken out with a needle nose pliers. You can completely separate the continuity of the top outlet from the bottom outlet by breaking both these tabs and wiring each outlet as a completely separate circuit. The ground plug is the only line that cannot be separated this way, and will remain common for both outlets. Alternatively you can break a tab only on one side and have the outlet share either the neutral or hot line. For a outlet set up to have constant power on the bottom break the tab on the neutral side, wire your hot line as normal and the "constant" neutral to the bottom neutral terminal, then run a second neutral from your switch. This would allow for the bottom outlet to be live all the time and the top to be switched on or off.
Profit maximization Increased market share Large number of outlets Increase in demand for their products
Weighted distribution is the percent of stores that a product is sold in, but weighted by the importance of the outlets, while share in stores handling is the market share of a brand/item just in the stores that stock it.
No, a main computer is not necessary as the router can be plugged into a socket.
Optometrists and manufacturers joined together against mail-order outlets and, to a lesser degree, other discount outlets, who have garnered an increasing share of the market in recent years.