OneDirection = direct current
OppositeDirection = alternating current
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direct current
DC current
No, One Direction have no current plans to split up.
What is a diode.
. . . then that would be alternating current, or simply, 'AC'.
A diode is one of the fundamental building blocks of electronics. They allow the flow of electrons in one direction only. Thus are commonly used as rectifiers to turn ac voltages into dc. [A dry cell (mistakenly called a battery, which is a group of cells) will allow electron flow in one direction only, or rather, it will provide current flow in one direction. ]
Alternating current.
AC, Alternating Current.
DC.
Direct current= flows in one direction ... AC flows in back and forward ..
That's a "direct" current.
the current which flows in only one specific direction is called as unidirectional current
A DC current flows only in one direction.
With alternating current the current flows alternately one way and then the other.
In one direction - or constant - is called direct current. The other sort is called alternating current.
Alternating Current could fit this description in this question.
Conventional current flow is the flow of positive charges, or the equivalent flow of positive charges. That is, if what flows is really negative charges (for example, an electron), which flow in one direction, the "conventional current" flows in the opposite direction.
This is known as a direct current or D.C.
the current flows in one direction only