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nature of material(resistivity),length of material,area of crosssection&temprature
The laws of resistance describes the resistance of a specific material. There are a total of four laws of resistance.
the energy that you can get from the electrical energy heat energy , mechanical energy , magnetic energy , light energy and Kinetic energy
The four main or basic concepts of electricity include current, power, and potential difference, which is the Voltage. The fourth main concept of electricity is resistance.
Forces can be broken down into two main types, contact and non-contact. Contact forces include friction, tension, normal, spring and applied. Non-contact forces are gravitational, electrical and magnetic.
There are really only three things that affect electrical resistance. They are the length and cross-sectional area of a conductor and its resistivity. However, resistivity depends not only on the material from which the conductor is manufactured, but upon its temperature. So you could say that temperature indirectly affects resistance via its resistivity.
Practical applications that depend upon electromagnetic induction are electrical generators and induction motors. Transformers and mechanically-powered flashlights also depend on electromagnetic induction.
nature of material(resistivity),length of material,area of crosssection&temprature
The laws of resistance describes the resistance of a specific material. There are a total of four laws of resistance.
constant resistance variable resistance and accomodating resistance
the four forces are;gravityfrictionair-resistance andpush
(2011 est.): transport equipment, motor vehicles, semiconductors, electrical machinery, (chemicals.)
Current, power, voltage and resistance are the four traits of electricity.
there's only 2 : friction and drag (air resistance and water resistance)
voltage
There are three, not four, factors that determine the resistance of a conductor. These are the length of a conductor, its cross-sectional area, and its resistivity.As resistivity is affected by temperature, you could say that temperature indirectly affects resistance but, strictly, temperature is affecting the resistivity not the resistance -which is why it is not considered a 'fourth' factor.So, resistance = resistivity x (length/area)
static, dynamic, lateral and resistance.