Sentences with phrase «more electrical resistance»

Not exact matches

It is contemplated that a user that may be nervous or engaging in speaking falsehoods may exhibit different galvanic skin response» — a change in the electrical resistance of the skin that is a physiochemical response to increased sympathetic nervous system activity — «than a more confident, truth telling individual.»
A compound of hydrogen and sulfur, when crushed at more than a million times Earth's standard atmospheric pressure, appears to whisk electrical current along without resistance at temperatures up to 203 kelvins.
The more you play the game, the easier it becomes to lower the electrical resistance of your fingertips on command.
When Joachim and Gimzewski moved the STM tip down, slightly flattening their buckyball, the molecule's electrical resistance dropped 100-fold, allowing the current to flow more easily from the STM tip to the metal surface.
A film with higher resistance has lower electrical conductivity, meaning that more voltage must be applied to send a signal through it, which further degrades the material.
In particular, injured areas of the body have less electrical resistance and are more susceptible to being damaged through the process.
Over time, increased resistance at the taillight electrical contact points may cause damage to the ground terminal and housing of the connector resulting in an intermittent or permanent loss of functionality of one or more rear lamp functions (tail, brake, turn - signal, reverse).
Using electrically powered heat pumps to heat the water, rather than using the simpler but more direct heating effect from electrical resistance could increase the amount of heat per kWh of electricity up to three-fold.
More specifically, the ground - penetrating radar and electrical resistance tomography measurements provided high - resolution information about the thickness of the active layer and water content.
The change of resistance of a PT100 is tiny, about 0.00385 Ohm per degree Celsius, so you need an electrical amplifier to multiply the small corresponding change in voltage to a value acceptable by the datalogger (Thermistors have a much much greater resistance change per degree Celsius, but are more non-linear and more imprecise).
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