yes, if you had enough static electricity
Technically, static electricity IS captured electricity. Thus the term "static". If you wanted to capture it, all you would have to do is keep building it up.
I could not find anything to support or deny that static electricity is used in finger printing. The best way one might be able to find this answer would seemingly be to ask a professor of law or science at a college.
Yes, because we would have no electricity if we didn't.
Since metals are conducting surfaces, they are terrible for conducting static electricity.
The "static" in static electricity describes that the charge is unmoving, or staying in one place. A movement of electrons is not occuring, however there is an electrical charge. The opposite would be current electricity that flows, and that you would find in electric cords, etc...
yes, if you had enough static electricity
Technically, static electricity IS captured electricity. Thus the term "static". If you wanted to capture it, all you would have to do is keep building it up.
Type "static electricity" in the question search, press go, and you'll find the definition.
static electricity is static electricity
I could not find anything to support or deny that static electricity is used in finger printing. The best way one might be able to find this answer would seemingly be to ask a professor of law or science at a college.
Yes, because we would have no electricity if we didn't.
Another form of static elecricity would be... lightning.
Since metals are conducting surfaces, they are terrible for conducting static electricity.
I would suggest "shocking science" as a title for a project about static electricity.
Static electricity is static. It's just shortened.
static electricity can be called high voltage static electricity can be called high voltage static electricity can bend water