If you feel you may have cause for legal action, you should consult an attorney qualified to review the full details of your case.
Generally speaking, unless you requested a reasonableaccommodation and the employer failed to provide one for you, you have no recourse. The fact that your employer knows you have a medical condition is not the same as notice that a reasonable accommodation is required. It is your responsibility to request an accommodation.
If you did request an accommodation, you may face difficulty proving it was reasonable. ADA rules have recently become much more friendly to mental disorders as a disability eligible for protection, however, accommodations must still be reasonable. If it was unreasonable for the employer to allow you to act as you did, then you again have no recourse.
The OR gate gets connected to Ground.
Pre terminated wires may mean one of a couple things. At least to my knowledge. Generally a pre terminated wire is a wire in use or that is connected thru in an operating device of some sort. The wiring in the state it came from the "assembly plant.' Non-terminated wiring generally refers to wiring that is not in use or not connected yet. "Terminated wires" are "connected wires." Pre-terminated could also refer to some wiring that already has the "connectors" placed on the wire. Not just a bare wire w/o connectors. Non-terminated could mean a piece of wire without "connectors" on it.
At a balanced condition the voltmeter connected across the wheatstone bridge will be zero.
yes
The anod terminal of diode is connected with negative and cathod is connected to positive
In the reverse-bias condition, the negative terminal of the source is connected to the anode side of the circuit and the positive terminal is connected to the cathode side.
keep a charged body near it. the condition is that when we it connected to the ground.
It should be connected to circuit breaker. Circuit breaker will automatically discontinue the flow of electricity if it detects faulty condition.
FRAUD
The ground wires should not be terminated on the neutral bus. They should be terminated on to the ground bus which should be located on the back wall of the distribution panel. The wires don't have to be pigtailed when inserted into the ground bus. More that one wire can go under the terminal screws if you are running out of room. Shut the panel off and remove any ground wires that are now under the neutral bus terminals and move them to the ground bus. Some panels use a lug for a ground bus. All ground wires into the lug and tighten. In a ground fault condition it is the ground wires that are connected to the ground potential that trip the breaker, not ground wires connected to neutrals. Be safe.
No, ground wires should not be terminated on the neutral bus. They should be terminated on to the ground bus which should be located on the back wall of the distribution panel. More that one wire can go under the terminal screws if you are running out of room. Shut the panel off and remove any ground wires that are now under the neutral bus terminals and move them to the ground bus. Some panels use a lug for a ground bus. All ground wires into the lug and tighten. In a ground fault condition it is the ground wires that are connected to the ground potential that trip the breaker, not ground wires connected to neutrals. Be safe.
When external source such as a battery is connected electrons get specific directions to move and condition starts