how would you show the heating effect of a current?
the 11th international air conditioning, ventilation, heating and refrigeration show.
The heating curve for glass would show a gradual and steady increase in temperature until it reaches its softening point, where it begins to deform. In contrast, the heating curve for water would show a relatively stable temperature increase until it reaches its boiling point, at which point the temperature remains constant until all the water has evaporated.
Since the equation of an inductor is ... di/dt = v/L ... then increasing the current in the RL network would cause a back-emf in the inductor that would initially seem to oppose the series current. More correctly, the question should ask "what if the voltage were increased?"; and the answer is that the rate of change of current in the inductor would increase, but the current would not initially change. This is the case for a series RL. For a parallel RL, increasing the current would initially show up as an increase the the current through the R, increasing voltage in the L, with the same effect as noted above.
show how something has happend
No, because the data does not show how quickly the ice would have melted without the salt.
You would call such an organism a carrier.
I don't belive you can. Ammeters just show how many amps are flowing through a particular current
you would write it as the current tv show I'm watching is the lab rats ^ yes, this shows the use of the word current but as a verb, but it has two more meanings that i can think of as a noun: eg. I ate a current eg. The football was swept away by the current in the water
you dont'n know that my name is khan and i am not a terriost
It wouldn't show up as a completed foreclosure, but it would show up. It would say "foreclosure started" or "foreclosure initiated" or something to that effect.
open command prompt and run 'ver'
show ip eigrp neighborsw