The short answer is no. What you are talking about is sometimes referred to as a perfect machine. Because of friction and other factors, energy is always lost. The only example of 100% efficiency has been observed by the collisions of atoms in a supercollider, in which the atoms are broken down into a frictionless liquid. The frictionless liquid is at extreme temperature and is very short lived.
none
However, many newer machines use much less water (only about a pail full) than older ones (fills drum to top) and most can run on cold water.
In short, yes.
Umm... Study!?!
If the substance under test is purer than the standard, the assay comes more than 100 pct.
To find 3 percent of a number, multiply the number by 0.03. In this instance, 0.03 x 300 = 9. Therefore, 3 percent of 300 is equal to 9.
That is becasue no machine is 100% efficient - SOME energy usually gets wasted.
No, no machine is 100% efficient.
it is not very efficientAnswerThey are 100 percent efficient.
No. Nothing is 100 percent efficient. In any situation some energy will be given off in a form that is useless to us.
Basically, almost NO physical process is 100% efficient.
because they are not proper
at 0'kelvin
Sweating is no longer efficient near 100 percent humidity.
Some energy is lost to friction.
22/100 anything that is a percent has a 100 as the denominator
Play a play a game
becaus ethey have friction
100% of anything is that anything. Just to confuse you even further, should that be possible, 409 percent of 100 is Yeah.... but im short the answer is 409.