No. Salt water is a conductor but not a superconductor.
SALTWATER# Relating to, consisting of, or containing salt water: # Inhabiting or occurring in seawater or salt water: # Done or used in salt water REGULAR WATERsimply the water you are drinking...Salt water contains salt. - Axxo
Water is already water so when water goes with water it becomes water then you add salt and water and it becomes salt water so you take your salt water and take your water in the water and mix the water in the water with the salt water it becomes the water in the water with salt water
Pure mercury will exhibit superconductivity at 4.2 degrees Kelvin. It was the first superconductive material that H. Kamerlingh Onnes found in 1911.
Salt
the difference between salt water and fresh water is that salt water is from the ocean and fresh water is water that hasn't gotten to the ocean and so the water is clean, And you can only drink fresh water not salt water
Water is not a superconductor.
American Superconductor was created in 1987.
Low temperature. A superconductor doesn't 'perform' at all, and isn't even a superconductor, above its critical temperature.
A superconductor superconducts ONLY at extremely low temperature.
Yes, a superconductor has zero resistance.
An ideal superconductor has exactly zero losses, thus resistance is zero.
The symbol for American Superconductor Corporation in NASDAQ is: AMSC.
The symbol for Superconductor Technologies Inc. in NASDAQ is: SCON.
A superconductor.
American Superconductor Corporation (AMSC) had its IPO in 1991.
Superconductor Technologies Inc. (SCON) had its IPO in 1993.
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it