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Home > Archive > Electrical Engineering > May 2007 > Dielectric Strengths of specific substances?
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Dielectric Strengths of specific substances?
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| Radium 2007-05-17, 3:25 am |
| Hi:
What are the dielectric strengths of the following?:
Human skin
Unsalted butter
Butryic acid
Human visceral** adipose tissue
**Visceral adipose tissue is different from the subcutaneous adipose
tissue. In the abdomen, there exist both types of adipose tissues, the
subcutaneous fat covers the abdominal muscles, while the visceral fat
is under those muscles and covers the digestive organs.
Quote from http://www.obesityresearch.org/cgi/content/full/9/5/283 :
"Visceral fat (i.e., intra-abdominal adipose tissue) and subcutaneous
abdominal fat are two discrete compartments of fat"
Thanks,
Radium
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| Salmon Egg 2007-05-17, 3:25 am |
| On 5/16/07 7:27 PM, in article
1179368822.977489.29830@u30g2000hsc.googlegroups.com, "Radium"
<glucegen1@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi:
>
> What are the dielectric strengths of the following?:
>
> Human skin
100psi
> Unsalted butter
9kCal/g
> Butryic acid
phew
> Human visceral** adipose tissue
In tension or compression?
>
> **Visceral adipose tissue is different from the subcutaneous adipose
> tissue. In the abdomen, there exist both types of adipose tissues, the
> subcutaneous fat covers the abdominal muscles, while the visceral fat
> is under those muscles and covers the digestive organs.
>
> Quote from http://www.obesityresearch.org/cgi/content/full/9/5/283 :
>
> "Visceral fat (i.e., intra-abdominal adipose tissue) and subcutaneous
> abdominal fat are two discrete compartments of fat"
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Radium
>
-- Fermez le Bush--about two years to go.
| |
| phil-news-nospam@ipal.net 2007-05-17, 9:25 am |
| In alt.engineering.electrical Radium <glucegen1@gmail.com> wrote:
| What are the dielectric strengths of the following?:
|
| Human skin
| Unsalted butter
| Butryic acid
| Human visceral** adipose tissue
|
| **Visceral adipose tissue is different from the subcutaneous adipose
| tissue. In the abdomen, there exist both types of adipose tissues, the
| subcutaneous fat covers the abdominal muscles, while the visceral fat
| is under those muscles and covers the digestive organs.
|
| Quote from http://www.obesityresearch.org/cgi/content/full/9/5/283 :
|
| "Visceral fat (i.e., intra-abdominal adipose tissue) and subcutaneous
| abdominal fat are two discrete compartments of fat"
Sounds to me like you are emitting sulfer-hexafluoride.
--
|---------------------------------------/----------------------------------|
| Phil Howard KA9WGN (ka9wgn.ham.org) / Do not send to the address below |
| first name lower case at ipal.net / spamtrap-2007-05-17-0744@ipal.net |
|------------------------------------/-------------------------------------|
| |
| Radium 2007-05-17, 8:25 pm |
| On May 17, 5:45 am, phil-news-nos...@ipal.net wrote:
> Sounds to me like you are emitting sulfer-hexafluoride.
How?
| |
|
| since none of those materials are really insulators the 'dielectric
strength' is undefined.
"Radium" <glucegen1@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1179368822.977489.29830@u30g2000hsc.googlegroups.com...
> Hi:
>
> What are the dielectric strengths of the following?:
>
> Human skin
> Unsalted butter
> Butryic acid
> Human visceral** adipose tissue
>
> **Visceral adipose tissue is different from the subcutaneous adipose
> tissue. In the abdomen, there exist both types of adipose tissues, the
> subcutaneous fat covers the abdominal muscles, while the visceral fat
> is under those muscles and covers the digestive organs.
>
> Quote from http://www.obesityresearch.org/cgi/content/full/9/5/283 :
>
> "Visceral fat (i.e., intra-abdominal adipose tissue) and subcutaneous
> abdominal fat are two discrete compartments of fat"
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Radium
>
| |
| Radium 2007-05-18, 8:25 pm |
| On May 18, 3:40 pm, "Dave" <n...@nowhere.com> wrote:
> since none of those materials are really insulators the 'dielectric
> strength' is undefined.
Huh? Isn't unsalted butter a good insulator?
| |
| Eric Gisse 2007-05-18, 8:25 pm |
| On May 18, 4:32 pm, Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 18, 3:40 pm, "Dave" <n...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>
> Huh? Isn't unsalted butter a good insulator?
only one way to find out. strip the ends off a 110VAC appliance, put
the hot on one end of a stick of butter and the neutral on the
opposite end, then plug it in. if the breaker doesn't trip, it
insulates.
| |
| Y.Porat 2007-05-19, 3:25 am |
| On May 19, 3:32 am, Eric Gisse <jowr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 18, 4:32 pm, Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> only one way to find out. strip the ends off a 110VAC appliance, put
> the hot on one end of a stick of butter and the neutral on the
> opposite end, then plug it in. if the breaker doesn't trip, it
> insulates.
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Hi bump parasite disturbed undegraduate that sits all day on the NG
Y.Porat
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