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Kirchof's Law - the voltages are measured between the same starting-point and end-point.
With a 10mA forward bias current, if the voltages at the anode and cathode of a diode in a circuit are found to be the same, then the diode most likely to be shorted.
They are not. They are connected differently, and the voltages and currents behave in different ways.
If they are at the same voltage, and the same kW, the only thing left that will influence the output amperage is the power factor the generator is running at.
Deceleration means to decrease the velocity. The SI unit is the same as acceleration. In SI units, acceleration is measured in meters/second² (m·s-2).
Kirchof's Law - the voltages are measured between the same starting-point and end-point.
As measured by Slater, yes, as calculated by Clementi, no. Please see the link.
yes
The conductors between a three-phase supply and a three-phase load are called line conductors not phase conductors, and the voltage measured between them are line voltages, not phase voltages. In the case of a delta supply, the line voltages are numerically equal to phase voltages, but the name remains the same!I have to admit that many people call line conductors 'phase conductors', but many people also say 'irregardless' -that doesn't make it a real word!!
The density (d) to be determined can be calculated by the formula: d = mass / volume , both measured from the same amount of matter.
What you're probably thinking of is the ML scale which measures "potential energy" of the tsunami. Don't get this confused with electrical potential (or voltage). they are not the same. the "potential energy" of a tsunami, I would assume, would be measured in joules.
Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.Its capacity or volume - measured in the same units.
Technically, there is no difference because both are measured and calculated in the same way. The only difference is how they occur or appear in nature.
Yes. mileage is measured the same in all vehicles.
In the same way as it is measured everywhere else!
No. The two run at completely different voltages.
Yes provided the voltages are the same.