yes
because ohmic materials such as resistors can be placed in ur bedroom for safe sex
non ohmic devices are diodes, LED's, Thermistors, LDR(light dependent resistors, cells in series.
symbols of fixed resistors
By their Colours DUMBARSE im a pornstar
This seems like a question from an electrical course, and is probably best answered by your course materials. It's your test question, not ours, and there won't always be someone to ask for the answer. Earn your diploma.
Fixed
Fixed resistors have a single, predetermined ohmic value. These resistors come in various types such as carbon film, metal film, and wirewound, and their resistance value does not change once manufactured.
No.
because ohmic materials such as resistors can be placed in ur bedroom for safe sex
non ohmic devices are diodes, LED's, Thermistors, LDR(light dependent resistors, cells in series.
symbols of fixed resistors
reduced flow of current
If the voltage across a resistor or resistors is halved, then the resulting current will also fall by half.
The different colored bands on it.
no.....thermistors are not ohmic.
A resistor is a passive two-terminal electrical component used to introduce resistance in an electric circuit. Metrosil is a type of resistor that is specifically designed to protect electrical equipment from overvoltage and lightning strikes by rapidly switching to a high resistance state when a voltage surge is detected. Essentially, Metrosil is a specialized type of resistor with specific protective properties.
An ohmic resistor is a resistor that obeys Ohm's law, and a non-ohmic one dose not. All resistors resistance will begin to change as there temperature changes, and often we need a resistor with a steady resistance, thus some resistors, which we refer to as ohmic, will disperse the heat being generated and therefore it will keep a steady resistance. Resistors that do not disperse their heat will have varying resistances and therefore are non ohmic. Ohms law, named after the German physicist Georg Ohm, states that the current through a conductor, between two points, is directly proportional to the potential difference (voltage) across the two points, and inversely proportional to the resistance between them. ~Ben Frilay-Cox