If the break is in either the feeder or return line, the circuit will become open and the circuit will cease to function.
A break in an electrical circuit will cause the circuit's load to stop operating.
In a parallel circuit (with more than one branch), the current will still flow in the other circuit(s) even if there is a break in one circuit. This is not so with a series circuit, since it does not have branches: if there is a break in the circuit, there is a break in the circuit.
Because circuit don't break unlike in series.That means rest of the component are getting the voltage across them.
What do you mean by a 'parallel delta' circuit -is there such a connection.
Basically if there is a break in a parallel circuit then it will continue to work, whereas if there was a break in a series circuit everything will go off.
It shouldn't. Your house wiring is a series- parallel circuit.
Nothing. That's why it's a parallel circuit. If it was a series circuit, then the first bulb would go out.
No change in supply voltage as additional resistance is connected in parallel circuit.
Incorrect answerThen only one of the lights go out.Correct answerActually ALL the lamps will go out if a short circuit occurs across any branch of a parallel circuit because, if the wiring has been done correctly, a circuit breaker will trip or a fuse will blow to cut off the supply of current to all the lights.The loss of a single lamp indicates a break, not a short circuit.
current remains same in series while divide itself in parallel circuit
There are four types of circuit: series, parallel, series-parallel, and complex.
The series circuit becomes an open circuit because there is no remaining path.