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  2. Perfect conductor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_conductor

    In electrostatics, a perfect conductor is an idealized model for real conducting materials. The defining property of a perfect conductor is that static electric field and the charge density both vanish in its interior. If the conductor has excess charge, it accumulates as an infinitesimally thin layer of surface charge. An external electric ...

  3. Optical conductivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_conductivity

    Optical conductivity is the property of a material which gives the relationship between the induced current density in the material and the magnitude of the inducing electric field for arbitrary frequencies. [1]

  4. Permittivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permittivity

    A perfect conductor has infinite conductivity, σ = ∞, while a perfect dielectric is a material that has no conductivity at all, σ = 0; this latter case, of real-valued permittivity (or complex-valued permittivity with zero imaginary component) is also associated with the name lossless media. [18]

  5. Electrical conductor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_conductor

    The ampacity of a conductor, that is, the amount of current it can carry, is related to its electrical resistance: a lower-resistance conductor can carry a larger value of current. The resistance, in turn, is determined by the material the conductor is made from (as described above) and the conductor's size.

  6. Superconductivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superconductivity

    The Meissner effect is sometimes confused with the kind of diamagnetism one would expect in a perfect electrical conductor: according to Lenz's law, when a changing magnetic field is applied to a conductor, it will induce an electric current in the conductor that creates an opposing magnetic field. In a perfect conductor, an arbitrarily large ...

  7. Photoconductivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoconductivity

    When light is absorbed by a material such as a semiconductor, the number of free electrons and holes increases, resulting in increased electrical conductivity. [2] To cause excitation, the light that strikes the semiconductor must have enough energy to raise electrons across the band gap , or to excite the impurities within the band gap.

  8. Trump uses image of Jill Biden to sell his perfumes and colognes

    www.aol.com/trump-uses-image-jill-biden...

    President-elect Trump shared an image of first lady Jill Biden when trying to sell his perfume Sunday. “Here are my new Trump Perfumes & Colognes! I call them Fight, Fight, Fight, because they ...

  9. Drude model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drude_model

    The simplest analysis of the Drude model assumes that electric field E is both uniform and constant, and that the thermal velocity of electrons is sufficiently high such that they accumulate only an infinitesimal amount of momentum dp between collisions, which occur on average every τ seconds.