Evaporation.
Evaporation.
No, trade winds and evaporation can cause a density current but not freezing.
the evaporation leaves salt behind and causes different densitys creating a density current.
Cold water is more dense than warm water so the cold water has to sink to the bottom which causes a density current.
the answer to this question is a density current forms when more dense seawater sinks beneath less dense seawater
The rock in a rising convection current is hotter and more buoyant than the surrounding rock, causing it to rise.
I assume you are referring to oceanic currents (instead of electrical current). Oceanic current is divided into 2 types: Surface Ocean Current -- affected by wind. Deep Ocean Current --cause by water density (mineral rich vs clearer water) and temperature gradient (differences in heat)
In magnetic circuits, such as occur in transformers and motors, the flux density is inversely proportional to the frequency, so a drop in frequency could cause overheating through excessive flux density.
cause it wantted to be named that
The cause is the current.
The density of the water increases.
Actually the line is "cause you sure been getting to me".. and the name of that song is "Gotta Get To You" - George Strait's new single from his current CD "Twang"... This song is currently #7 on the charts and heading for #1... everyone needs to call their local radio stations and request to hear this amazing song.