God. He calls it lightning.
Answer #2:
No one invented. It was around for a long time before humans were even there. Probably from the start of the Earth itself. It was created as the Earth was.
Thick steel wool will conduct electricity better than thin steel wool because it has more surface area for the current to flow through. The thicker material allows for more pathways for the electricity to travel, resulting in lower resistance and better conductivity.
When you come into contact with electricity, it can flow through your body if there is a path for it to follow, such as through your skin and tissues. The severity of the shock depends on the voltage of the electricity, the pathway it takes through your body, and the duration of contact. It can disrupt the normal functioning of your muscles and nerves, potentially causing injury or death.
Yes, more current will typically pass through a thick wire compared to a thin wire because the thicker wire offers lower resistance to the flow of electricity. This lower resistance allows more electrons to flow through the wire more easily, resulting in a higher current.
Yes, air can pass through thin plastic. The rate of air permeability depends on the type and thickness of the plastic material.
The wiring inside the light bulb is very thin (the filament) and glows when heated. The current through the thin wire heats up the filament wire so that it will glow. See the related link 'How Light Bulbs Work'.
sir humphrey davy. his light was created by electricity going through a thin piece of platinum wire.
They run through both evenly! .o.
Electricity moves better through thick wire. This is because thick wires have a lower resistance and allows more current to pass through it. Now that might be true but I did an experiment with a thick wire,thin wire,light bulb,and D batteries and the thin wire made the light bulb light up brighter. So, really its probably a thin wire.
hi i think because it is so thin and very softy to touch and with many of the reactions electricity passes
No, it moves at the same speed regardless of the wire gauge.
Thick steel wool will conduct electricity better than thin steel wool because it has more surface area for the current to flow through. The thicker material allows for more pathways for the electricity to travel, resulting in lower resistance and better conductivity.
If the potential is high enough, yes electricity can pass through paper.
Electricity through a thin wire (filament) makes it glow, which is prevented from burning through the wire by gas inside the bulb.
When you come into contact with electricity, it can flow through your body if there is a path for it to follow, such as through your skin and tissues. The severity of the shock depends on the voltage of the electricity, the pathway it takes through your body, and the duration of contact. It can disrupt the normal functioning of your muscles and nerves, potentially causing injury or death.
When electricity passes through the thin wire in a lightbulb, it is changed to light and heat energy. The electrical energy produces heat in the wire, causing it to glow and produce light.
No it does not FORM it. It converts chemical energy in the battery cell into electrical energy which is then passed through a thin wire called the filament at the bulb. The filament lights up when electricity passes through it, thus giving out light.
Simply put, no. A light bulb lights up because the filament inside (the thin wire that often breaks) has a lot of resistance in it, then when electricity flows through it, it heats up and glows brightly.