This is most likely due to Electrostatic Charge. That being said, you generate static either by friction (sliding) or by clothing.
Very dry cloth (nylon, silks, rayons and some polys) are more prone to create static. Over drying them makes the matter worse. Some fabric sheets help reduce this problem.
If you want to avoid it, try changing your clothing material, avoid sliding off the seat when you get out (not an easy task) and by holding a small metal object (such as the car key) tightly in your hand, and allowing this metal object to make the first contact with the door or door handle so that the static charge is destroyed. You may see a tiny spark, and although you may sense something, the shocks that you have been experiencing will be avoided.
To avoid the shocks, there are also straps that can be attached to your vehicle that discharge any static electricity built up in the vehicle to ground. They are readily available at most any store that sells auto parts or accessories.
by regions where the isobars are close together:D ...A+
The starter solenoid receives a large electric current from the car battery and a small electric current from the ignition switch. When the ignition switch is turned on, a small electric current is sent to the starter solenoid. This causes the starter solenoid to close a pair of heavy contacts, thus relaying a large electric current to the starter motor, which in turn sets the engine in motion.
Higher pressure on the convex side (from the heart contracting) than the concave side causes them to open. When the pressure reverses (the heart relaxes) they close.
YES it does. It should be close to intake.
The idea goes that the pressure inside a tornado is very low (which is true) while the pressure inside a building stays close to normal, which would lead to an enormous outward force on the walls that would produce an explosion.In reality, though, this does not happen for a number of reasons.Buildings are not airtight and air can escape them fairly rapidly, preventing any major pressure difference from building up.The pressure drop inside a tornado is not large enough to cause major damage.Even if the pressure difference was allowed to build up and become strong enough to cause damage, the windows would break and relieve the pressure before the walls or roof failed.The winds of a tornado are what cause damage. In a strong tornado these winds will tear open sections of the building and even weak tornadoes can break windows.
Yes, rubbing a comb on the hair creates static electricity which can attract small bits of paper when they come close. The electric charge on the comb will cause the bits of paper to stick to it momentarily.
Sometimes, but it needs to be close to or in the water and be strong.
strong
It is static electricity build-up. When you, or other people, rub against an object with a certain property, it causes static electricity build-up, and whenever two people get close enough, when at least one has the build-up, the protons and electrons jump towards each other from each body, causing electric shock, or static electricity shock.
Normally it is static therefore it does no work. An insulating surface is capable of supporting a collection of free electric charges, and they produce an elecric field which produces a force on any other charge that is brought close.
Because water conducts electricity and a car has certain parts in it that are electric. Getting close towards a car that is wet can cause electric chock and a potential of death.
no if it is windy nothing will happen cause it is not strong
Putting an electric watch too close to a strong magnetic field can disrupt the delicate magnetic components inside the watch, affecting its accuracy and functionality. The magnetic field can interfere with the movement of the hands and inner mechanisms, leading to inaccurate timekeeping or complete failure of the watch. It's best to keep electric watches away from strong magnetic fields to ensure their proper functioning.
Charging a balloon creates static electricity, which induces a temporary electric field around the balloon. When the charged balloon is brought close to a stream of water, the water molecules polarize and are attracted to the charged balloon, causing them to bend towards it.
Static electricity is an imbalance of electric charges within or on the surface of a material. The charge remains until it is able to move away by means of an electric current or electrical discharge. Static electricity is named in contrast with current electricity, which flows through wires or other conductors and transmits energy.[1]A static electric charge is created whenever two surfaces contact and separate, and at least one of the surfaces has a high resistance to electrical current (and is therefore an electrical insulator). The effects of static electricity are familiar to most people because people can feel, hear, and even see the spark as the excess charge is neutralized when brought close to a large electrical conductor (for example, a path to ground), or a region with an excess charge of the opposite polarity (positive or negative). The familiar phenomenon of a static shock-more specifically, an electrostatic discharge-is caused by the neutralization of charge.Hope this helped as i am spoderman.
When a charged rod is brought close to someone's hair, the rod's electric field interacts with the positive and negative charges in the hair. The hair strands become polarized, with opposite charges being attracted to each other. This causes the individual hair strands to repel each other, leading to the hair standing up.
Strong ones at or above 6 on the earthquake scale. Earthquakes centered close to human connerbations. Earthquakes that cause Tsunamis.