An open circuit or a short-circuit (if that circuit is complete).
A zener diode has a relatively constant reverse voltage, at the designated zener voltage. If you had a circuit, say, with an AC source, a resistor, and a zener, the waveform across the zener would be the AC source, clipped at the reverse bias zener voltage, and clipped again at the forward bias voltage, typically about 0.7 V.
A series circuit is actually in series, but a parallel circuit, is Parallel
An electric circuit.
Connecting integrated circuits is not the same as the much simpler cases of resistors, capacitors, inductors, motors, light bulbs, etc. Integrated circuits have designated functions, and they operate in concert with the surrounding circuit design. As such, the idea of "connecting identical integrated circuits in series" has no meaning in the general case. You would need to state what kind of integrated circuit is involved.
this is a circuit in which the switch is located before the load in the circuit
run in a electrical system means a wiring & conduit runs coming from Panel Board Circuit Breaker to its branch circuit loads in a circuit. while circuit is a designated number of branch breaker in a panel board where power load was individual connected.
A: complex IC can have a pin designated as enable that will allow the IC to perform a decision to let its output contribute the the scheme of things
Current flows in loops. It doesn't just "stop" at some designated location. So if you have 1.5 amps flowing into a location in a circuit, 1.5 amps will be leaving it as well. It will not magically disappear, or like voltage, just stop.
It is not good practice in new wiring, but done all the time as part of a retrofit. Use 12 AWG wiring and make sure the circuit is not overloaded.
The synonym of designated is specific
DEF designated units
Because circuit is a circuit.
no, you decide if your going to be the designated driver or not
Designated Drinker was created in 2000.
Designated Targets was created in 2005.
Designated Targets has 384 pages.