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NO
Insulator
Wood An insulator is a material that does not allow charges to move through it easily.
Materials that carry conductive characteristics. (i.e. Water, copper, and other various metals.)
material or an object that conducts heat, electricity, light, or sound. Electrical conductors contain electric charges (usually electrons) that are relatively free to move through the material; a voltage applied across the conductor therefore creates an electric current. Insulators (electrical nonconductors) contain no charges that move when subject to a voltage. Compareinsulator. See alsoresistance, superconductivity.
NO
Electric Current.
Insulator
No, it's called 'current'.
Copper is very good conductor of electric charge. That is why it is invariably used in the electric motors.
A materiel that allows an electric charge to pass through it is an conducter (copper, for example)
Yes, an electric current is the flow of charged particles.
There are 2 questions in this : 1: if it is about material... A: No electric charges can also travel through all the conductors of electricity like water, humans, animals, metals etc. 2: if it is about area in which electric charges pass through... A: No, If current is AC then it travels on the surface of the wire, and if the current is DC then it travels through the wire evenly.
flow of electricity through a conductor are electric charges
Electric charges can travel through solids, liquids, or gases. They can travel through conductors, insulators, and semiconductors.
Electric charges can travel through solids, liquids, or gases. They can travel through conductors, insulators, and semiconductors.
the passing of electricity through conductive and semi-conductive material