no
its because of transformers . they work with pulse
Capacitor is connected parallel to the line which serves as power factor correction, increase line efficiency, voltage stability and reduced line losses and voltage drop.
Yes, IF the operating voltage of the stereo is the same as the battery output voltage of the vehicle.
The term "voltage" was named after Italian physicist Alessandro Volta, who invented the battery in 1800. "Voltage" is a measure of the potential energy between two points in a circuit, named in honor of Volta's groundbreaking work in electrical science.
Yes, it will work just fine. In the United States the voltage coming into homes and businesses is 240 volts but the term 220 volts is commonly used but they essentially mean the same thing.
It is a gas filled container and the gas need a higher volts to initially breakdown for conduction so a starter is necessary to increase the line voltage to higher voltage at the same time a heater is applied at both ends to heat the gas to maintain conduction
You need to be more specific. Electricity works the same everywhere -- voltage and current are used to do work.
If they are the same wattage and voltage, and have the same connector, yes.
They are equivalent in terms of energy content or work potential. In other words, 100VAC (RMS) will do the same amount of work that 100VDC will.
Stereo can't work unless sufficient voltage , same will be connected to higher input voltage your system will be damaged.
It is the 'as if' voltage in an AC circuit. Referred to as Vrms 120 volts in your house is Vrms, the effective voltage, 'as if' it were DC 120V, can do the same work. But 120VACrms is a sine wave with a peak voltage much higher than 120 volts.
Negative voltage is voltage that is more negative in polarity than the ground of the circuit.AnswerSince 'voltage' is simply another word for 'potential difference', it can be neither negative or positive in the 'charge' sense! These terms can only be applied to 'potential', not to 'potential difference' (voltage).So, the terms 'positive' and 'negative', when applied to voltage, simply indicate sense or direction in which the potential difference is acting. For example, if you decide that a car battery's voltage is acting in the 'positive' sense in the charging circuit, then the alternator's voltage must then be acting in the 'negative' sense -in other words in the opposite direction to the battery.