Yes.
By Kirchoff's current law, a series circuit has the same current everywhere.
the current in series will be same..
In a series circuit current does stay the same thoughout the circuit, voltage drops in the series circuit.
No. The current in a series circuit is the same everywhere. The voltage across a parallel circuit is the same.
The current flowing through a series circuit is (voltage between the circuit's ends) / (sum of all resistances in the circuit). The current is the same at every point in the series circuit.
A series circuit has the same amount of current at all points in the circuit.CommentIt's not simply 'the same amount of current at all points''; it's the same current at all points.
Current = (Voltage across the circuit) divided by (Total resistance of the circuit). The current is the same at every point in the series circuit.
In a series circuit the current remains the same throughout the circuit. This is not the case for parallel circuits.
current remains same in series while divide itself in parallel circuit
Current in a series circuit travels in one path. This is because a series circuit is only one path. current in a series circuit stays the same thoughout the circuit this means that if in the beginning of the circuit there are 2 amps of current there will be the same ammount of current in the middle and in the end of it. if you don't understand this please tell me and ill explain in a better way.
Current. There is only one path that current can take through the circuit, so the current must be the same at every point.
The current at different places in a series circuit is the same. Kirchoff's current law states that the signed sum of the currents entering a node is zero. A consequence of this is that the current at every point in a series circuit is the same.