Peltier Effect
The Peltier effect is the presence of heating or cooling at an electrified junction of two different conductors and is named after French physicist Jean Charles Athanase Peltier, who discovered it in 1834. When a current is made to flow through a junction between two conductors, A and B, heat may be generated or removed at the junction.
See Also
Aharonov-Bohm Effect
Bjerknes Effect
Casimir Effect
Cause and Its Effects
Effect
effect of motion
effects of motion
electric effect
electrical effect
Hundredth Monkey Effect
Kervran Effect
law of cause and effect
Mind Force - a Reproducible Effect
Nocebo Effect
Ozone Effects
photoelectric effect
Placebo Effect
production of the opposite effect
Renner-Teller Effect
ripple effect
Seebeck Effect
spinning effect
Steric Effects
Table 13.03 - Photoelectric Effect of Elements
Table of Cause and Effect Dualities
Thermoelectric Effect
thermomagnetic effect
triboelectric effect
two-way divided effects of motion
two-way effect
Tyndall Effect
Zeeman effect
zero cause and dual effect
11.08 - Matter is an Effect of Will Force
14.11 - Ranges of Forces Effects and Actions
14.30 - Effect of Preponderance
15.24 - Water is Sensitive to Biometeorological Effects
16.11 - Seebeck Effect
2.22 - Voiding - an Effect of Desire and Will Force