Strength
∞ (VIII / XI) =
& the limits imposed on Self through B.S. (R.A.M.)
Ohm's Law
Om̐ Lex
ॐ धर्म / कानून
Énoncé de la loi d'Ohm
Georg Simon Ohm
On note :
- U ― la tension aux bornes de la résistance exprimée en volts (V),
- I ―l’intensité du courant qui circule à travers la résistance exprimée en ampères (A).
- R ― la valeur de la résistance, exprimée en ohms (Ω).
La loi d'Ohm établit que (en convention récepteur) :
U = R x I
On peut en déduire :
Un dipôle électrique vérifiant la loi d'Ohm est appelé un conducteur ohmique.
Ohm's Magic Triangle
Ohm's magic triangle (Voltage) U = R * I : Voltage = resistance*Current : [volt] I = U / R : Current = Voltage/Resistance : [ Ampere] R = U/I : Resistance = Voltage/Current : [ Ohm]
Ohm's magic triangle The magic V I R-triangle can be used to calculate all formulations of Ohm's law.
from Akkadian 𒅆𒂍𒉪 (ziqqurratu), from 𒁲 𒊑 (zaqāru, literally “to build high”)
Ur: (/ʊər/; Sumerian: Urim; Sumerian Cuneiform: 𒌶𒆠 URI5KI, 𒋀𒀕𒆠 URIM2KI or 𒋀𒀊𒆠 URIM5KI; Akkadian: 𒋀𒀕𒆠, romanized: Uru; Arabic: أور, romanized: ʾūr; Hebrew: אור, romanized: ʾûr) was an important Sumerian city-state in ancient Mesopotamia, located at the site of modern Tell el-Muqayyar (Arabic: تل المقير) in south Iraq's Dhi Qar Governorate, founded by Ur-Nammu (or Ur-Namma, Ur-Engur, Ur-Gur, Sumerian: 𒌨𒀭𒇉) who ruled c. 2112 BC – 2094 BCE.
Ur: A hypothetical early supercontinent that may have existed on Earth during the Archaean (Ancient Greek ἀρχαῖα arkhaîa, “ancient”, neuter plural of ἀρχαῖος arkhaîos, “ancient”) aeon (of, or relating to the geologic aeon from about 3,800 to 2,500 million years ago; comprises the Eoarchean, Paleoarchean, Mesoarchean and Neoarchean eras; marked by an atmosphere with little oxygen, the formation of the first continents and oceans and the emergence of simple life).
I/U Once thought I/U Could not
motstånd: resistance (an act of resisting; electric resistance), resistor (Ω)
spänning: tension, mechanical stress (V)
(Ω) ⟴ Ohm (Noun: m genitive Ohms, plural Ohme or Ohms) (archaic) Alternative form of Oheim (“uncle”) from northern Middle High German ōem and Middle Low German ōm, with reduction of the unstressed ultima and regular loss of intervocalic -h- from Old High German ōheim, Old Saxon *ōhēm, from Proto-West Germanic *auhaim (“maternal uncle”).
Om̐ provient de la fusion des phonèmes sanskrit A, U et M :
- A représente le commencement, la naissance, et le dieu créateur Brahmā ;
- U représente la continuation, la vie, et le dieu Vishnu ;
- M représente la fin, la mort, et le dieu destructeur Shiva.
La syllabe représente donc la totalité de ce qui existe, elle est ce « qui contient le passé, le présent et le futur, tout en étant d'essence autre », ainsi que la trinité hindoue.
La prononciation du om̐ est parfois décrite ainsi :
- a émerge du fond de la gorge, vers le palais,
- u roule sur la langue et
- m termine sur les lèvres.
- a symbolise la veille,
- u, le rêve,
- m, le sommeil.
L'éveil correspond au quatrième temps : le silence, départ et retour du Pranava, et donc, Kali, déesse temporelle.
Cette syllabe serait la somme et la substance du son de l'Univers.
Om̐ est le son de ce qui n'est pas entrechoqué, contraire à de l'air sur le larynx, ou au bruit d'un arbre qui se brise.
Certaines cloches घंटा • (ghaṇṭā) sont spécialement conçues pour produire les longs accords du son Om̐.
Selon René Guénon, Om̐ en tant que nom du Logos est également présent au début du christianisme sous la forme AUM par un monogramme représentant les trois lettres AVM se chevauchant. Pour cet auteur il s'agit d'un ancien symbole du Christ qui a été plus tard assimilé à une abréviation de Ave Maria, mais qui était primitivement un symbole réunissant les deux lettres extrêmes de l'alphabet grec, l'alpha et l'oméga, pour signifier que le Verbe est le début et la fin de toute chose.
ओम Om̐ (प्रणव Pranava) ― Amen: from Ecclesiastical Latin āmēn, from Ancient Greek ἀμήν (amḗn), from Biblical Hebrew אָמֵן (ʾāmēn, “certainly, truly”).
Aum iti ek akshara Brahman (छांदोग्योपनिषद् "Chāndogya-upaniṣad"), en Sanskrit :
« Aum, cette unique syllabe est le brahman ».
॥ प्रथमोऽध्यायः ॥
ओमित्येतदक्षरमुद्गीथमुपासीत । ओमिति ह्युद्गायति तस्योपव्याख्यानम् ॥ १.१.१ ॥
1. Om̐ is the closest word to Brahman. Recite this Om̐ as if you are worshipping Brahman. [That is, treat this Om̐ as the symbol of Brahman and concentrate on the idea of their oneness.] How you recite this Om̐ is being explained.
Word-for-word explanation:
Om̐ iti, this Om̐ [is closest to Brahman]; etat akṣaram udgītham upāsīta, recite this syllable as part of your upāsanā [ritual]; hi om̐ iti udgāyati, how you recite this Om̐; tasya upavyākhyānam, is being explained.
Commentary:
Om̐ is as good as Brahman. To begin with, it is a symbol of Brahman. But it is not just a symbol; it is Brahman itself. The Upaniṣad says to recite Om̐ as if you are worshipping Brahman. This recitation is called udgītha, and it is a loud recitation. You recite Om̐ aloud, but you do it with the feeling that you are worshipping Brahman. This worship then eventually purifies the mind. The importance of Om̐ is being explained in the following verses.
The Ekakshara Upanishad (Sanskrit: एकाक्षर उपनिषत्: Ekākshara Upaniṣat), also titled Ekaksharopanishad (Sanskrit: एकाक्षरोपनिषत्), is a minor Upanishadic text of Hinduism written in the Sanskrit language. It is attached to the Krishna Yajurveda and is a Samanya (general) Upanishad.
The Upanishad discusses ओम Om̐ (प्रणव Pranava) as the Ultimate Reality, Brahman, equating it to the imperishable truth and sound, the source of the universe, उमा the Uma, शिव the Shiva, नारायण the Narayana, आत्मान the Atman (soul) that resides in one’s heart. The one immortal syllable (एकक्षरा Ekakshara), is described in the text as हिरण्यगर्भ the Hiranyagarbha (the golden fetus, the sun, Brahma), the manifested universe, as well as the guardian of the universe.
एकाक्षर Ekakshara, literally "the one syllable", refers to Om̐ of Hinduism. It refers to the primordial sound, the seed, the source of the empirically observed universe, representing the totality of manifested changing cosmos and the unchanging supreme reality ब्रह्म Brahman. The term उपनिषद Upanishad means it is knowledge or "hidden doctrine" text that belongs to the corpus of वेदांत Vedanta literature collection presenting the philosophical concepts of Hinduism and considered the highest purpose of its scripture, वेदों the Vedas.
Manuscripts of this text are also found titled Ekaksaropanisad. In the Telugu language anthology of 108 Upanishads of the Muktika canon, narrated by Rama to Hanuman, it is listed at number 69.
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