The best way to determine this is by experiment. You should try different kinds of soap, and at different levels of wetness, since the answer may vary.
ohmic conductor does obey ohm 's law. non ohmic conductor does not obey ohm's law.
ohmic conductors are those which obey ohm's law
Diode is a non-ohmic conductor since in diodes current-voltage relation ship does't obey Ohm's law....the relationship between current and voltage is nonlinear here,...
If it has constant temperature (one can do this by dipping it in a beaker of water) it can be considered an ohmic conductor since Ohm's law states that the Voltage and amperage are directly proportional in a metallic conductor of constant temperature.
ohmic ocnductor is a material which obeys ohm's law: i.e. the voltage and current are directly proportional 2 each other anda non-ohmic ocnductor is a material which doesn't obey ohm's law:)
A 'non-ohmic' conductor is one that does not obey Ohm's Law -i.e. the ratio of voltage to current is not constant when the voltage across it varies.
That depends on the what substance the wire is made from. Wires made from metals, such as iron, copper, gold, are good conductors. Wires made from aluminum would not be as good of a conductor.
This solution is not a good conductor.
An ohmic resistor is a resistor that obeys Ohm's law, and a non-ohmic one dose not. All resistors resistance will begin to change as there temperature changes, and often we need a resistor with a steady resistance, thus some resistors, which we refer to as ohmic, will disperse the heat being generated and therefore it will keep a steady resistance. Resistors that do not disperse their heat will have varying resistances and therefore are non ohmic. Ohms law, named after the German physicist Georg Ohm, states that the current through a conductor, between two points, is directly proportional to the potential difference (voltage) across the two points, and inversely proportional to the resistance between them. ~Ben Frilay-Cox
It depends on whether the material is ohmic or non-ohmic.If it is ohmic, then it will obey Ohm's Law, and its resistance will remain constant if the current decreases.If, on the other hand, it is non-ohmic, it will not obey Ohm's Law and, if the temperature of the conductor falls (assuming it is a metallic conductor) due to the fall in current, then its resistance will fall too.
no.....thermistors are not ohmic.
Ohmic (or 'linear') materials obey Ohm's Law. That is, their ratio of voltage to current remains constant for variations in voltage. Ohmic materials, therefore, produce a straight line graph when we plot current against variations in voltage;Non-ohmic (or 'non-linear') materials do not obey Ohm's Law. That is, their ratio of voltage to current variesfor variations in voltage. This means that non-ohmic materials produce a curved line graph when we plot current against variations in voltage.