Dissipate means when you pull something apart or something is getting forced/pulled apart.
1. unrestrained by convention or morality
2. preoccupied with the pursuit of pleasure and especially games of chance
Lessen, fade away, dry up.
10V
Stay with-in the amperage capability, the voltage capability, and use a heat sink to dissipate the heat build up.
You don't. Motors have vents to dissipate heat. Although you can see the windings through these vents, don't cover them or the motor will overheat and burn up.
No. A fixed resistor cannot be used as a dimmer in a lighting circuit. Depending on the dimming setting, you would need to dissipate substantial power across the resistor. What you need instead is some kind of pulse width modulated device, such as an SCR or TRIAC, or switching power supply, that does not dissipate a lot of power when it is turned on, because it operates in saturated mode, but the average power delivered to the load is what you want it to be.
You want a filter to remove energy at only certain frequencies, and not to have any affect on all the others. Resistors just dissipate energy, regardless of what its frequency may be.
Dissipate means when you pull something apart or something is getting forced/pulled apart.
The clouds began to dissipate after the storm. He watched her anger dissipate into a profound sense of relief as the truth finally sank in.
Smoke will dissipate faster when there is a breeze blowing.
It means for the energy to get away, to spread out. Usually used for excess heat.
Dissipate means to disappear by becoming more and more tenuous or less dense. Hence "A crowd dissipates when the members of the crowd drift away one by one."
The noun forms of the verb to dissipate are dissipation, dissipator (or dissipater), and the gerund, dissipating.
to scatter
reciprocate
save
6j
"Upon detecting the menancing presence of a lioness, the gazelles were quick to dissipate." (Dissipate means to dispel, disperese, scatter, drive away, waste, or squander.) :)
dissipate heat