The brightness of each bulb in a parallel circuit is the same as the brightness of a bulb in a simple circuit. By Kirchoff's voltage law, each element of a parallel circuit has the same voltage drop across it. With the same voltage, the same type of bulb will dissipate the same power, and have the same brightness.
by "simple" I believe you mean series, at any rate, components in parallel will have less resistance, so the parallel would be brighter. the answer also depends on other factors such as the power source and other components in the circuit
Neither. Providing it is supplied at its rated voltage, it will provide its rated power (brightness). You can achieve this in either a series circuit or a parallel circuit if you know what you are doing, Having said that, lamps are normally connected in parallel.
In series.
A simple circuit is a circuit containing one voltage or current source in series with, or in parallel with, one load.Since it is a simple circuit, both definitions, series and parallel, are equivalent and mean the same thing.well ist a circut that only has one wire and if one power outlet goes out so do the rest and as you can read i can't really find out i was tring to find out and thats not simple because im a 10 year old in 5th grade! (advanced 5th grade)
We did this experiment in class, the more batteries added, the brighter the bulb will become!
Reading this question, one kind of has to guess what's being asked. Here's a statementthat may or may not be helpful to the questioner:A series circuit is one in which there's never a point where the current has to decidewhich path to take. There's never a point where the current can split, and there's onlyone possible route all the way through the circuit.In a series circuit, the magnitude of the current is the same at every point.
A simple circuit is a circuit containing one voltage or current source in series with, or in parallel with, one load.Since it is a simple circuit, both definitions, series and parallel, are equivalent and mean the same thing.well ist a circut that only has one wire and if one power outlet goes out so do the rest and as you can read i can't really find out i was tring to find out and thats not simple because im a 10 year old in 5th grade! (advanced 5th grade)
In the series connection and how there is multiple paths or branches on parallel circuits but in a simple circuit, there is one path.
Yes, a battery operated toy has a parallel circuit - the battery is in parallel with the toy. In fact, this is true for any system where there is a single equivalent source and a single equivalent load. While it is true that this is also a series circuit, by Kirchoff's current and voltage laws a simple series circuit is also a simple parallel circuit.
In series.
Simple parts of a circuit are switches, light bulb, battery and connecting wires.
ANSWER: The brightness of both bulbs will decrease. If the bulbs are identical the current will decrease to 0.2 Amps. This is a simple series resistive circuit, the more bulbs you add in series both the amperage and bulb brightness will continue to go down.
Voltmeters are connected to simple series circuits the same way they are connected to any circuit. They are connected in parallel with the portion of the circuit for which you wish to measure the voltage drop.
the three types of circuits are series, parallel, and series-parallel.AnswerThere are, in fact, four types or categories of circuit, not three! These are series, parallel, series-parallel, and complex.The term 'complex' is somewhat misleading, because a 'complex circuit' is not necessarily complicated (although they often are!) but merely the collective name for any circuit that isn't series, parallel, or series-parallel. A simple example of a complex circuit is a bridge circuit, such as Wheatstone's Bridge.
That will depend on whether they are added in series or parallel.
A simple circuit is a circuit containing one voltage or current source in series with, or in parallel with, one load.Since it is a simple circuit, both definitions, series and parallel, are equivalent and mean the same thing.well ist a circut that only has one wire and if one power outlet goes out so do the rest and as you can read i can't really find out i was tring to find out and thats not simple because im a 10 year old in 5th grade! (advanced 5th grade)
We did this experiment in class, the more batteries added, the brighter the bulb will become!
Reading this question, one kind of has to guess what's being asked. Here's a statementthat may or may not be helpful to the questioner:A series circuit is one in which there's never a point where the current has to decidewhich path to take. There's never a point where the current can split, and there's onlyone possible route all the way through the circuit.In a series circuit, the magnitude of the current is the same at every point.
The power dissipated by the complete circuit, no matter whether it's a series or parallel one, is the simple sum of the power dissipated by each component of the circuit.