Sparks
short circuit
Most polymers are not very good conductors, so using them to cover the bare wires provides some degree of insulation, making it safer to touch the coated wires than it would be to touch the bare wires. It also helps prevent the wires from "shorting out" to each other or to ground.
Because, if you touch a bare wire, and it has more than 500ma it can stop your heart. If not it just hurts a lot.
Because you touch yourself at night. And they touch each other.
When two current-carrying wires are placed close to each other, they generate magnetic fields around them. These magnetic fields interact with each other, causing the wires to attract each other due to the Lorentz force. The direction of the force depends on the direction of the current flow in the wires.
A single curve cannot touch "each other" since "each other" implies two curves.
No, atoms do not physically touch each other because they are surrounded by electron clouds that repel each other due to electromagnetic forces.
When two wires with parallel currents are placed close to each other, they can create a magnetic field that interacts with each other. This interaction can cause the wires to either attract or repel each other, depending on the direction of the currents. This phenomenon is known as the Ampre's force law.
yes.
the bars normally do not touch each other.
Once you locate the "hot" wire, touch other wires to make the other windows go up & down. As you do this use masking tape to label where and what each one does. (Such as "right rear down") Once you have all the wires labeled you'll be able to connect them to their respective positions on the switch.
Gas particles do not touch each other in the way that solid particles do. The particles in a gas are in constant motion and are separated by large distances relative to their size. However, they can collide with each other and with the walls of their container.