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Electric current does not need a liquid. It can pass in solids, liquids, gases, and even empty space. If it passes through a liquid, the liquid is called an electrolyte.
Becomes heat.
Basically, if you fill a room with steam and pass an electrical current through it... Does anything interesting happen?
A magnetic field generates around the wire.
becomes more converging
The part of a voltaic battery by which the electric current leaves substances through which it passes, or the surface at which the electric current passes out of the electrolyte; the negative pole; -- opposed to anode.
Electric current does not need a liquid. It can pass in solids, liquids, gases, and even empty space. If it passes through a liquid, the liquid is called an electrolyte.
Becomes heat.
Yes. DC can pass through. As it passes through then solenoid would act as if a bar magnet.
Basically, if you fill a room with steam and pass an electrical current through it... Does anything interesting happen?
Water is dissociated in hydrogen and oxygen.
It will burn out.
A magnetic field generates around the wire.
Electrolysis of pure water is very slow and not significant; adding an electrolyte (an ionic salt) the electrolysis is a large scale process.
what happens to interstellear gas as it passes through a spiral density wave
No current passes through the Atacama Desert but the Humbolt, or Peruvian Current, passes just off shore and has a great influence on the climate of the Atacama.
I don't know. Ask your chemistry teacher. Sincerely, a girl who doesn't know.