Examples of using Static charge in English and their translations into Turkish
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Static charge.
Picking up a static charge.
Allowing a static charge to build in the corridor. I have disabled power regulation in this section.
Three meters… and we're picking up a static charge.
Picking up a static charge. Three meters… and we're.
On the metal… So long as there's fuel and static charge.
And look out for static charge. Special teams are exempt.
WaIter, are you absolutely sure that there's a static charge up there?
From building up a lethal dose of static charge. So I always wondered how you kept the friction?
Special teams are exempt, and look out for static charge.
We just have to pray that one static charge has been trapped in the cylinder.
The electric ions around the chopper, It's working--the wind is blowing removing the static charge.
And we're picking up a static charge. Three metres.
Removing the static charge. It's working-- the wind is blowing the electric ions around the chopper.
So long as there's fuel and static charge on the metal.
That static charge that you felt when you hugged Tracey… that could have marked the artefact.
Even so, you would still need a tremendously powerful static charge to trigger the process.
You know how you build a static charge sliding across your seat getting out of your car?
An efficient way to prevent ESD is touse materials that are not too conductive but will slowly conduct static charges away.
The electric ions around the chopper,removing the static charge. It's working-- the wind is blowing.
Static charge generation in these systems is best controlled by limiting fluid velocity.
Getting out of your car? You know how you build a static charge sliding across your seat?
That static charge that you felt when you hugged Tracy? That could have marked the activation of an artifact.
Now we just need a large burst of wind nullifying the static charge. to propel the ions onto the copter.
Static charge from a plastic comb in a highly oxygenated environment would be a powerful accelerant.
About 1876 the American physicist Henry AugustusRowland of Baltimore demonstrated the important fact that a static charge carried around produces the same magnetic effects as an electric current.
The static charge created by the photoelectric effect is self-limiting, because a higher charged object doesn't give up its electrons as easily as a lower charged object does.
In a field equation consistent with special relativity(i.e., a Lorentz invariant equation),the attraction between static charges moving with constant relative velocity is always toward the instantaneous position of the charge(in this case, the"gravitational charge" of the Sun), not the time-retarded position of the Sun.
The little static charges that they have can make them stick when they hit, and you get something sort of like the dust bunnies that I have a lot of underneath my bed.

