| voltage |
The force which pushes electricity through a wire.
Ãâó: www.dairynet.com/kids/gloss.html
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| voltage |
A unit of measuring electrical pressure, all batteries are rated in volts DC (Direct Current). The voltage of Alkaline batteries droops in a curve during its life. Lead-Acid, Zinc-Air, Silver-Oxide and NiCd batteries have a much more constant voltage - a
Ãâó: www.batmax.com/glossary.php
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| voltage |
a sort of "electric pressure", gauging the electric force acting on ions or electrons (or more accurately, the amount of energy they might obtain from that force). In electric devices such as are used in the home, increasing the voltage increases the electric current--just as increasing the pressure driving water through a pipe increases its flow rate. (The scientific term is "potential" or "potential difference".)
Ãâó: www-spof.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education/wgloss.html
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| voltage |
Electromotive pressure that forces current through an electrical conductor. The difference of potential between any two conductors of a circuit .
Ãâó: www.precisionautosound.net/glossary.html
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| voltage |
The correct name for this term is potential difference as a voltage is the measure of the difference in electrical energy between two points. Any electrical charge that is free to move about will move from the higher energy to the lower one, taking a bit of that energy difference with it. This movement of charge is called a current and makes PCs work!
Ãâó: www.futuremark.com/community/hardwarevocabulary/
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