Electricity moves better through thick wire. This is because thick wires have a lower resistance and allows more current to pass through it.
Now that might be true but I did an experiment with a thick wire,thin wire,light bulb,and D batteries and the thin wire made the light bulb light up brighter.
So, really its probably a thin wire.
A thick wire has less resistance, so it is easier for a current to flow through a thick wire, and less power will be lost for the same amount of current.
Thick wires - they have less resistance.
Electricity moves better through thin wires.
Electricity only moves through the air if there are electrically charged particles in the air and a live current passed through it. It also travels in the form of static electricity (lightning).
uh, mostly metal.(obvious)
electricity doesnt move...its the electrons...rather free electrons in materrials that moves nd we call it as electric current
static electricity
As unsatisfying as I'm sure you'll find this, that depends on your definition of "electricity." If you mean electricity in the most conventional sense of an electrical current, electricity can move through any medium in which charge carrying quantons (protons, elecrtons, etc) can move at least somewhat freely.
No, it moves at the same speed regardless of the wire gauge.
No, it does not.
rubber would be an example of something that does not allow electricity to move through it easily
A battery supplies energy to move electricity through a circuit (Remember, a circuit is a wire.)
No, electricity can not move through paper
A circuit.
Electrons move through the wire
Circuit
rubber would be an example of something that does not allow electricity to move through it easily
Electricity only moves through the air if there are electrically charged particles in the air and a live current passed through it. It also travels in the form of static electricity (lightning).
electricity
uh, mostly metal.(obvious)