This question makes no sense whatsoever without giving details of "the board" being asked about...
There is no point in copying and asking this kind of incomplete fragment from such a homework or exam question.
'Electricity' is the name given to a branch of science; it is NOT a quantity. So your question should read, 'How does an electric current flow through a parallel circuit?'The answer is that a parallel circuit is made up of two or more individual 'branches'. The sum of the currents flowing through each branch is the value of the current being drawn from the supply by the complete circuit.
A current of cool air is called a draft.
The correct term for the flow of electricity is current. Current is the number of electrons flowing per second in a circuit. The unit of electrical current flow is called the ampere. When 6.28 billion electrons pass a given point, this is called 1 coulomb. 1 coulomb per second is equal to 1 amp of current. Current flow is measured with an ammeter.
A single route for electrical current is called a branch circuit.
An eddy.
The charged particle that flows through circuits is an electron.
Overloading of electric circuit means that the current circulating in the circuit becomes more than the capacity of components in the circuit to withstand the current. All components in the circuits have some resistance passage of electricity through this resistance produces heat which is directly proportional to the square of current flowing. The components are designed to withstand only that much of heat as is generated by maximum designed current. When the current is more than this level, or in other words when the circuit is overloaded the components get overheated, leading to their damage. Frequently electric circuits in homes, factories, and other electrical installations incorporate fuses, which are essentially circuit component which protect other components in the circuit by quickly melting or burning out when the circuit is overloaded, resulting in breaking of the circuit. In common language this is called blowing of fuse.
Capacitive reactance.
In DC(direct current) circuits, voltage is scalar. But in the case of alternating-current(AC) voltage is vector quantity. It is because in an AC circuit the current is changing the direction for every time period. Therefore, since in this the direction matters its a vector quantity. Regards.
Sequential Logic circuits are a type of logic circuits in which its output depends on the current and last input (memory). a digital circuits that contain filp-flop is called as sequential ckt because its output at any time depend not only on its current input but also past sequence memory of past event.
Transferrer
A series circuit is where there is only one path for the current. As a result, and as a direct consequence of Kirchoff's current law, the current at every point in a series circuit is the same.
It is called Ohm's Law; it's used a lot in analysis and design of circuits. The relationship is: V=IR (voltage = current x resistance).
Tiny piece of silicon with electronic circuits in the CPU is the one known as a the processor. This piece will contain all the components of an electric circuit.
Sequential Logic circuits are a type of logic circuits in which its output depends on the current and last input (memory). a digital circuits that contain filp-flop is called as sequential ckt because its output at any time depend not only on its current input but also past sequence memory of past event.
Yes and it reverses many times every second, how many times it does this is called its frequency.
Analog circuit continuous uses the time voltage and currents while digital circuits are sometimes called the on/off and high/low control of voltage in circuits.