mivey
Senior Member
Nope. But the voltage you measure between them is the voltage between them, not just an appearance of voltage.Because the neutral at your house is exactly 0 volts. Just like the voltage at my house is 0 volts. And if we measure between them we would get 0 volts?
That's right: zero is what we want it to be. That's why the voltage measured between two points, with a conservative field, is about as close to absolute as you are going to get.It's why we use a building grid. If we drove separate rods for each machine we'd shock everyone with the potential difference between different machines. 0 volts is a fiction except in relative measurements.
A point does not have a voltage so that is as close to absolute as you will get for a voltage.Measuring between two points is called relative not absolute.
Here, have anotherYea! I got a smiley!![]()
Of course. I just prefer to use it where applicable.The question would be whether you've ever used the word "apparent" in its scientific application.
We can bunch together any number of words we want. Whether or not that grouping will makes sense is a different matter.Unless you're proposing that we can't borrow words from other disciplines. In which case I'll have to concede that George is right.