resistance
A voltage regulator is a circuit or device designed to deliver a constant voltage at its output regardless of changes in load current.A voltage stabilizer is a circuit or device designed to deliver a constant voltage at its output regardless of changes in incoming voltage.
The ability of conductor to induce voltage in itself when the current changes is called inductive reactance.
A rectifier is an electronic device that changes an AC voltage to a DC voltage.
The device you are referring to is called a transformer. Not only can a transformer increase voltage, it can decrease voltage as well. These are known as a step up transformer for increasing voltages and step down for decreasing voltages.
Rectifiers don't "stabilize the output voltage" of rectifier circuits when input voltage fluctuates. The rectifiers just rectify the input, and the output will fluctuate as the input does. Another form of "conditioning" of the rectified output is needed to address the issue of fluctuations. And we use the term regulation to talk about the effect of "stabilizing" an output voltage. Through regulation, the output will be resistant to changes in voltage when changes in the input voltage occur.
Opposition to voltage changes in a wire is called back EMF or counter EMF.See related links below.
if its typed on the ecg as in the computer itself made the diagnosis it probably doesnt mean anything at all... and I'm serious the computer is terrible at reading ECG, however, if a Dr. says you have prominent right vent voltage it could indicate pulmonary hypertension or early sign congestive heart failure.
An abnormal ECG may indicate some heart problems. It may be an indication of changes in the heart, congenital heart defect, changes in amount of potassium in the blood, heart attack or poor blood supply to the arteries.
see related link
An ECG (Electrocardiogram), or an EKG (Elektrokardiogramm) works by measuring electrical potential between various points of the body using a galvanometer (a very sensitive voltage meter). -DJ Craig
ECG Machine is the process of producing an electrocardiogram( ECG or EKG), a recording of the heart's electrical activity. It's an electrogram of the heart which is a graph of voltage versus time of the electrical activity of the heart using electrodes placed on the skin. These electrodes detect the small electrical changes that are a consequence of cardiac muscle depolarization followed by repolarization during each cardiac cycle( heartbeat). Changes in the normal ECG pattern occur in numerous cardiac abnormalities, including cardiac rhythm disturbances( such as atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia), inadequate coronary artery blood flow( such as myocardial ischemia and myocardial infarction), and electrolyte disturbances( such as hypokalemia and hyperkalemia).
NSST on an ECG stands for non-specific ST, and is usually followed by the word "changes." Non-specific ST changes are alterations in the shape, height, or slope of the ST segment in the ECG that don't point to a particular diagnosis.
Yes and no. As voltage changes, current changes, causing power to change, with the end result that temperature changes. Most resistors have a small temperature coefficient, so their resistance will change slightly as the voltage changes.
A Transformer.
an insulator
Voltage
A voltage regulator is a circuit or device designed to deliver a constant voltage at its output regardless of changes in load current.A voltage stabilizer is a circuit or device designed to deliver a constant voltage at its output regardless of changes in incoming voltage.