For a good answer you need to tell us what you mean by grouping. It comes to my mind that you may mean can you put outlets in the same room, or different rooms, on the same or different circuits to accomplish a certain purpose of sharing or not sharing a circuit. The answer is yes.
You may group them or intermix them in any manner you wish, with the exception of kitchen, dining room, pantry, laundry, and/or bathroom outlets. These have special requirements.
If this doesn't answer your question, please provide more information.
Yes
Assuming all of the individual batteries are the same voltage, if arranged in a parallel circuit the voltage is the same as any one battery. If arranged in a series circuit the voltage will be the sum (the total) of all of the batteries added together.
It has components that are arranged end to end in order to produce light.
Any circuit that even has more than one branch is a parallel one.
In a modern home you use parallel circuit's. The reason why they are parallel circuit and not series is For example: say your kitchen light goes off, if that light goes off the others in your house won't. They also use parallel circuit in schools. However, when there is a switch in the circuit, that switch is in series with the load, so you could say that electrical wiring is arranged in series-parallel.
Spelt: AmmeterIt measures the current flowing around the circuit. In different places in the circuit, the reading may be higher or lower.
Can the outlets in a circuit be arranged in different groups to obtain the same result? Why?
A circuit can be arranged in either a series or parallel configuration. In a series circuit, the components are connected in a single path, so the same current flows through each component. In a parallel circuit, the components are connected in multiple paths, allowing different currents to flow through each component.
True!
Assuming all of the individual batteries are the same voltage, if arranged in a parallel circuit the voltage is the same as any one battery. If arranged in a series circuit the voltage will be the sum (the total) of all of the batteries added together.
It has components that are arranged end to end in order to produce light.
How are circuit And a river bed different
There is no current at all in the series circuit until the last component is in place, and the order in which they're arranged in the series circuit has no effect on the magnitude of current.
Yes, different amperage rating circuit breakers can have the same short circuit characteristics.
You must mean "why can i model a boiler and pump" as an electrical circuit. The answer is "elecrical components can be arranged to correspond to a useful mathematical model for the boiler and pump."
Any circuit that even has more than one branch is a parallel one.
In a modern home you use parallel circuit's. The reason why they are parallel circuit and not series is For example: say your kitchen light goes off, if that light goes off the others in your house won't. They also use parallel circuit in schools. However, when there is a switch in the circuit, that switch is in series with the load, so you could say that electrical wiring is arranged in series-parallel.
Electric circuits with 2 terminals can be arranged in "series" or in "parallel". This applies to all 2-terminal circuits - including fundamental components such as resistors, capacitors, or inductors. The term "series" means that an electrical path in an existing circuit is broken and the circuit is connected to the 2 terminals of the break. The term "parallel" means that the electric circuit is connected between 2 existing terminals or nodes of the existing circuit.