so v=i/r normally. with no resistance there is infinite current with any voltage. What my actual question is, "Is there a limit on how much current a superconductor can take before it won't take any more or it quite superconducting, and which one comes first?"
I'm thinking about a superconducting backbone grid for the US that would be kind of like the internet backbone, to allow the peak time shift to use juice from other timezones. I was wondering if you would need a mega piece of superconductor to run a several states power through or if even a small wire that was cold enough would work.
I'm thinking about a superconducting backbone grid for the US that would be kind of like the internet backbone, to allow the peak time shift to use juice from other timezones. I was wondering if you would need a mega piece of superconductor to run a several states power through or if even a small wire that was cold enough would work.