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Joule effect

Joule effect and Joule's law are any of several different physical effects discovered or characterized by English physicist James Prescott Joule. These physical effects are not the same, but all are frequently or occasionally referred to in literature as the "Joule effect" or "Joule law" These physical effects include:

  • Joule's first law (Joule heating), a physical law expressing the relationship between the heat generated and current flowing through a conductor.
  • Joule's second law states that the internal energy of an ideal gas is independent of its volume and pressure, depending only on its temperature.
  • Magnetostriction, a property of ferromagnetic materials that causes them to change their shape when subjected to a magnetic field.
  • The Joule–Thomson effect (during Joule expansion), the temperature change of a gas (usually cooling) when it is allowed to expand freely.
  • The Gough–Joule effect or the Gow–Joule effect, which is the tendency of elastomers to contract if heated while they are under tension.