An electrical mass??? The only thing I can think of that would be any thing close would be a charged battery or a charged capacitor.
2006-12-20 03:30:07
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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When I was preparing students for the both the Cambridge and Michigan University Lower and Proficiency Exams, consistancy in the compositions and oral interviews mattered above all. Now the lower levelled national exams were all based on British English, so here you have a student who has been learning to spell a certain way over at least a 5 year period, and all the sudden they are expected to remember all the differences for the most important exams of all. Cambridge University was more strict in marking the differences than Michigan was, but the Cambridge Exams are more theory-based, and the Michigan highlight an ease with use in the second language. The newer London University Exams are hit and miss, spelling doesn't even count if it does not take away from the understanding of what has been written. To answer your question, it goes both ways...but you are right to be annoyed at being corrected by people who do not realize there are a fair amount of differences between the two languages (British and American English) and that both are correct. When I see questions or answers I can barely understand because of spelling errors, it makes my skin crawl, but I try to remember this may be a person who is still in the process of learning English...the only forgivable excuse. And some people were just never able to further their education and/or never needed to write much in the jobs they have had over the years, I don't mind their making mistakes, either...it is understandable. So are type-o's. Some peple are just serious dickwads, yaknows? Reall hi and mitey and think there hot shite an all dat, and everyone else shud be and look and smell and talk and write just like'em...
2016-05-23 00:06:24
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I do not understand the question.
Are you asking, "What is the mass of an Electron?" then the answer would be:
A stable subatomic particle in the lepton family having a rest mass of 9.1066 × 10-28 grams and a unit negative electric charge of approximately 1.602 × 10-19 coulombs.
If your are asking, "What are units of electicity?"
Then the answer would be: The smallest unit of electricity is a single electron.
What is a mathmatical expression for electricity?
Ohms Law, which states that E= IR where E = voltage, I = current and R= resitance. These are properties of a simple electric circuit.
2006-12-20 03:33:26
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answer #3
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answered by Mr Cellophane 6
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None of us understands your question, but I'll guess you're talking about a quantity of electrical charge (as one answerer said, as in a charged capacitor). The standard unit of charge is the Coulomb; it is the amount of charge that flows past a given point when a 1 ampere current flows for 1 second.
2006-12-20 03:36:06
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answer #4
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answered by kirchwey 7
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there is no such thing as an electical mass, but if there was it would be spelled electrical mass.
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2006-12-20 03:21:55
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answer #5
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answered by DanE 7
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