Molecular vibration: Difference between revisions

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Vibrations of a Methylene group (-CH2-) in a molecule for illustration: - Seems scissoring should redirect here, making "Scissoring (chemistry)" redirect. Page was missing.
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[[Image:Ohms law voltage source.svg|right|100px]]
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'''[[Ohm's law]]''' states that, in an [[electrical circuit]], the [[electric current|current]] passing through a conductor, from one terminal point to another, is directly [[Proportionality (mathematics)|proportional]] to the [[potential difference]] (i.e. [[voltage drop]] or [[voltage]]) across the two terminal points and inversely proportional to the resistance of the conductor between the two terminal points. The SI unit of current is the [[ampere]]; that of potential difference is the [[volt]]; and that of resistance is the [[ohm (unit)|ohm]], equal to one volt per ampere.
 
In mathematical terms, this is written as:
:<math>I = \frac VR</math>,
 
where ''I'' is the current, ''V'' is the potential difference, and ''R'' is a constant called the [[electrical resistance|resistance]].

Latest revision as of 22:19, 1 October 2014

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