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by noticing the thickness of the ventricular walls
The thickness
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No. A thicker conductor will lower resistance.
Do you mean resistance instead of thickness?
Metals are conductive, but are not perfect conductors and so they have some electrical resistance. How the resistance of the metal is affected by "thickness" depends on what you mean by thickness. If the electrical current has to flow through a longer piece of metal, then the resistance of the metal to electrical flow would be greater. However, if you take that same length of metal and increase the area of the metal by increasing its "thickness", then the resistance of the metal becomes less.
Increasing wire thickness decreases its resistance, while increasing its length increases its resistance. Provided the voltage between the ends of the wire is constant, the current through it is inversely proportional to its resistance.
A thicker wire has less resistance than a thinner wire.
A thicker wire has less resistance than a thinner wire.
The factors that determine resistance are thickness, length, temperature, and the conductivity of the resistance of an object
An ultrasonic thickness gauge outputs ultrasonic waves which are reflected off a base surface. The resistance caused by the "coating layer" is measured by the magnitude of the returned waves. This resistance is used to determine a thickness measurement.
yes.it affect.because thick wire cannot hold high resistance of current