It doesn't.
This is the combined gas law: pV=nRT.
The equation PV = nRT is derived from the ideal gas law, which incorporates principles from both Charles's Law and Boyle's Law. Boyle's Law states that pressure and volume are inversely related at constant temperature, while Charles's Law states that volume and temperature are directly related at constant pressure. Therefore, PV relates to Boyle's Law when temperature is constant, and it relates to Charles's Law when pressure is constant.
Low temperatures for superconductivity can be reached by using techniques such as liquid helium or liquid nitrogen cooling. These coolants are able to chill materials down to the extremely low temperatures required for superconductivity, typically below a critical temperature specific to each material. Other methods, such as magnetic cooling or adiabatic demagnetization, can also be used to achieve low temperatures for superconductivity in some cases.
97 k ohms is equivalent to 97,000 ohms. Just multiply the value in kiloohms by 1,000 to convert it to ohms.
Pressure, volume, and temperature are related in the combined gas laws, which describe the behavior of gases by showing how changes in one of these factors affect the others. These laws include Boyle's law, which relates pressure and volume at constant temperature; Charles's law, which relates volume and temperature at constant pressure; and Gay-Lussac's law, which relates pressure and temperature at constant volume.
Most certainly not, resistance plays important role in electronic circuits, it is not just a burden.
The unit of Ohms was named after the German physicist Georg Simon Ohm, known for Ohm's Law which relates the voltage across a conductor to the current flowing through it.
ohms law.
Superconductivity (reducing electromagnetic resistance (ohms) to nearly zero, which allows minimal energy loss and the ability to be a super-magnet).
To find the conductance using ohms law,you take the inverse of the resistance(/R)
Current
No.
no
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
Ohms law does not consider inductance
Ohms law.
in transformer