When an inductor is fully charged, it reaches a steady state where the current flowing through it is constant. At this point, the inductor behaves like a short circuit, and the voltage across it drops to zero, as it has stored maximum energy in the magnetic field. If the circuit is interrupted or switched off, the inductor will attempt to maintain the current flow, causing a voltage spike that can potentially damage components unless managed properly.
as far i think,there is no current flowing between two fully charged capacitor.current flow in a capacitor happens until it gets fully charged.if it is fully charged then there is no lack of potential,so no current flow.
A capacitor charge as a time constant of R resistance C capacitance in ufd and it is defined as 63% for one time constant for the constant voltage source. Electronic engineers assume that a capacitor is fully charged by a 5 times constant. however mathematically speaking it will never be fully charged for obvious reasons. Therefore the answer is current will never stop/
magnetic flux will be induced its use to rotate the shaft or given some force
An inductor looks like a piece of wire to DC. It will thus look like a resistor, and inductor properties do not apply.
Until its fully charged, you idiot.
It will not remain "charged" for long. The speed of collapse of the magnetic field is related to the inductance, in Henries. A (physically) large inductor will retain energy for longer. (note that there is no "charge")
When an inductor is suddenly connected in parallel with a charged capacitor, the current through the inductor and the voltage between its ends will oscillate at the frequency of F = 1 / 2 pi sqrt(L x C) . With real-world components, having resistance and connected through wire that has resistance, the amplitude of the oscillation will steadily decrease as energy is lost in the circuit, and the oscillation will eventually become too small to measure, and disappear.
Yes, the battery is fully charged.
Over time you will shorten the lifespan of your battery. Once it's fully charged if you don't need to use the battery just unplug it from the laptop and only work with mains power.
No, but it will work better if it is fully charged.
Sulfation can happen when battery is not fully charged and remains discharged
When it is charging the screen reads: Battery Charging. When it is fully charged it reads: Battery Charged.
A fully charged 12 volt automotive battery should have 12.68 volts.
Not fully, but these days come more than half charged, yes.
as far i think,there is no current flowing between two fully charged capacitor.current flow in a capacitor happens until it gets fully charged.if it is fully charged then there is no lack of potential,so no current flow.
i think in case of dc supply there will not be any induction
Laptops that's battery is fully charged does not weigh any more or less than one that's battery is not fully charged. If there is a difference, it would be so small you would not be able to tell.