are you dum?a circuit with a source of energy and at least one conductor is blah.
a "short" one
battery, generator, alternator, etc.
We know that a conductor allows electricity to move through it. Conductors have a source called mobile electrons that go side to side inside the conductor itself when an external source connects to it their source goes through the conductor allowing electricity to flow.
The circuit needs some sort of energy source. This can be a battery/cell, or an AC outlet for example.
Heat transfers thermal energy efficiently from one source to another. The movement of particles when heated results in this efficiency.
The voltage source is the source of the electricity. The conductor is what the electricity flows through to reach its destination. Example: A battery is a voltage source and an electrical wire is the conductor.
The battery is the voltage or power source, the wires form the conductor.
A conductor carries the voltage potential from the source to the load, i.e. the wires from a circuit breaker to a light.
You require a power source, a conductor and a load.
source
The terminology for a steady flow of electrons through a conductor is called the current of the circuit.
source
a conductor and a source of energy
A wire carrying electricity to a load. The wire conducts the energy from a source to a device. That connection in a complete circuit does work.
Circuit has three components which electricity passes through. First is the power source, the supplier of electricity in a circuit. Second is the conductor that includes the wiring, switches, and any component that control the flow of electricity. Lastly is the load, or the devices that consumed the electricity. In conclusion the electricity flows from source to the conductor then to the loads.
the energy source cercuit the diagram with coultghmtr that destryos the circuit
Voltage -the rate at which energy is drawn from a source that produces a flow of electricity in a circuit; expressed in voltsCurrent - a flow of electricity through a conductor; "the current was measured in amperes"