Not exact matches
The
weak pulses travel outward through the water then back to the
electric organ through thousands of conductive pores covering the fish's body.
Some fish, such as the
electric ray (Torpedo nobiliana), stun their prey with huge electrical discharges, while others sense their surroundings with a stream of
weak pulses — sometimes more than 1000 a second.
The coil was connected to a capacitor, which discharged an
electric current to create a split - second magnetic
pulse inside the coil, about 10 times
weaker than the magnetic field generated by an MRI machine in a hospital.