Want this question answered?
Current can't pass through an open circuit .
No, the ground wire is there for safety reasons and only carries current in fault conditions.
By definition an electrical circuit is a route or path that starts and finishes at the same place. So there is no part of an electrical circuit that is not necessary, because if there were it would not be an electrical circuit.An electrical circuit needs a power source. Conductors to transmit the voltage from the power source to the load. The final component of the electrical circuit is the load that you want to energize.If you remove any of the components there will be an open circuit and the load will be impossible to operate.
That is called electrical current.
A continuous unbroken path of electrons is a closed circuit. If there is an opening, then it is an open circuit.
Current can't pass through an open circuit .
Current can't pass through an open circuit .
-- power supply -- power-dissipating component -- connecting conductors
In a series circuit, all bulbs are necessary to complete the circuit. If one bulb goes out, the circuit is broken, so none of the bulbs would light up.
A complete path and a voltage source.
the complete and total absence of any point in the circuit where the current has any choice of which way to go ... no 'forks in the road'
battery, wire, and light bulb
No, the ground wire is there for safety reasons and only carries current in fault conditions.
By definition an electrical circuit is a route or path that starts and finishes at the same place. So there is no part of an electrical circuit that is not necessary, because if there were it would not be an electrical circuit.An electrical circuit needs a power source. Conductors to transmit the voltage from the power source to the load. The final component of the electrical circuit is the load that you want to energize.If you remove any of the components there will be an open circuit and the load will be impossible to operate.
An open circuit or a short-circuit (if that circuit is complete).
no, the circuit won't complete
Current flows through a complete circuit.