The maximum amount of energy that a battery can hold before reaching its infinity charge limit is determined by its capacity, which is measured in watt-hours (Wh) or ampere-hours (Ah). Once a battery reaches its capacity limit, it cannot hold any more energy and is considered fully charged.
It's probably a reference to the deposit hold put on your credit card at the time of rental. In such cases, the amount of the deposit is not actually charged to your card, but a "hold" is placed on that amount (basically, reserving that amount of money against your maximum charge limit). For example, if your credit card limit is $5,000, and a deposit hold of $250 is put on that card, your limit becomes $4,750 during the time that hold is active, because $250 is being earmarked for the rental company in case it is needed in the future.
The maximum amount of money that a credit card can hold is determined by the credit limit set by the card issuer. This limit is based on the cardholder's creditworthiness and financial history.
No, the Van de Graaff generator can produce a large amount of charge but does not hold the charge itself. The generator must be in motion in order to produce electricity. Once the motion stops, the charge is lost.
when the current supply to the capcitor it can store or hold little amount of charge
There is no limit to the amount of Tickets that any user on Roblox can hold at once.
A debit card has no limit - except the amount of money in the bank account that's linked to it.
The charge all resides on the surface of the sphere, whether or not there's anything inside the surface. In principle, there's no limit on the amount of charge that can be jammed onto the sphere. The only limit is a practical one, that is, how much charge you can move and transfer to the sphere before it starts arcing back to the machinery or the support that's holding it.
there is no limit.
My guess is that the first capacitor that was constructed to hold an electrical charge was the Leyden Jar. It was invented in 1745 by Ewald Georg von Kleist, Jean-Antoine Nollet, and Pieter van Musschenbroek. As the name implies, it is a glass jar that can hold static electricity for long periods. It was actually invented by accident, the inventors didn't set out to create it.
The weight limit for hold luggage on this flight is 50 pounds per bag.
Well I doubt it would be able to hold a charge of that density in air. When a sphere of radius 1cm is charged to such a high level, the electric field will be far larger than the dielectric strength of air. Hence, a breakdown voltage will be achieved and electrons will flow even through air. It's the same principle that lightning works on. 1 coulomb is a huge amount of charge, and the surface charge density in this case will be too high for air to take. So, a sphere of radius 1 cm cannot hold 1 Coulomb of charge.