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Anonymous Poster #1

Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 9:53 AM

I have heard from my teacher in the undergrad, she said change in conductivity corresponds to an electrical potential? Is it true?

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Guru
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#1

Re: Change of Salinity corresponds to potential difference

09/09/2015 10:01 AM

YES!

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#2

Re: Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 10:03 AM

Good teachers will teach, not just tell.

So when your instructor stated this to you, what was the reasoning that was provided to substantiate the statement?

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#3

Re: Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 1:40 PM

Even Anonymous, ESPECIALLY anonymous posters should read the rules before asking rudimentary questions that could be easily answered by using a search engine.

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Although you are free to post as you wish, as long as your post does not violate the CR4 Site Use Policy, we ask that you follow these guidelines when posting or commenting on CR4.

  • Look for answers before you post. Check a search engine or two to see if you can find the answer to your question or a collection of useful links. If you can't, or if the answer you find is unclear, then that's a pretty good justification for asking the question on CR4. We don't want to stifle questions, but you're more likely to get a helpful response if you've done a little research on your own.
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#4
In reply to #3

Re: Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 3:01 PM

Thank you Lyn!

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#5

Re: Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 3:55 PM
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#6

Re: Change of Salinity Corresponds to Potential Difference

09/09/2015 5:46 PM

"Electrical conductivity is a material's ability to conduct an electric current when an electrical potential difference is applied across it. It is also known as specific conductance, and should not be confused with conductance which is a property of a component, whereas conductivity is a property of the substance from which the component is made."

http://www.calculator.org/property.aspx?name=electrical%20conductivity

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