charge
If this question is asking about the box supplied by your utility company which counts the kilowatt.hours you used, so they can send you a bill for electricity, it is called an electricity meter. If you are asking about the name of the standard unit used to measure a quantity of electricity used, it is called the kilowatt.hour (or k.Wh for short.)
'Electricity' is not a quantity, so it doesn'thave an 'amount'. You need to rephrase your question to make it more specific -e.g. what do you mean by 'electricity'?
generally for a condensing turbine the quantity for generating one MW electricity the steam quantity remains 8.5 t/h. it will depend on the design of Turbine in Our project it is 5.5 t/MW
It causes the electricity flow faster,which in term increases the electrical flow.CommentChanging a circuit's resistance doesn't cause 'electricity' to flow faster -or slower, come to that! First of all, 'electricity' isn't a quantity, so it cannot be measured, and it doesn't flow! If, by 'electricity', you mean 'current', well that isn't made to 'flow faster' either.If the supply voltage is constant, then increasing a circuit's resistance causes the magnitude of current to fall. This has nothing to do with its 'speed'!
The basic principle of a transducer: A transducer which converts a physical quantity to the electrical quantity.
Some is an unspecified number or quantity. It is not a definite number.Some is an unspecified number or quantity. It is not a definite number.Some is an unspecified number or quantity. It is not a definite number.Some is an unspecified number or quantity. It is not a definite number.
A fixed quantity of liquid at a fixed temperature and pressure.
A bolt of fabric is a quantity of fabric of definite length.
'Electricity' is not a quantity, it's a topic. So 'emitting electricity' is quite meaningless. You need to rephrase the question to specify what quantity you are actually referring to when you say 'electricity'.
First LawThe quantity of a substance produced by electrolysis is proprotional to the quantity of electricity used. Second LawFor a given quantity of electricity the quantity of substance produced is proportional to its weight.
No.
A substance that has no definite shape or volume and can conduct electricity is called a conductor, such as copper or aluminum.
Plasma
In the SI standard for physics units (see NIST website,) quantities of electricity are measured in coulombs, same as the quantity of electric charge.
The practical unit of quantity of electricity is the Coulomb, which is equal to the amount of charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second.
First LawThe quantity of a substance produced by electrolysis is proprotional to the quantity of electricity used.Second LawFor a given quantity of electricity the quantity of substance produced is proportional to its weight.
Quantity; amount., A definite portion of a manifoldness, limited by a mark or by a boundary.