The battery is the voltage or power source, the wires form the conductor.
The battery is the voltage or power source, the wires form the conductor.
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.
A difference of potential (voltage) and a conductor connected to the voltage source will cause current flow. Not that you'd want to "short out" a voltage source with a piece of wire, but just the source of voltage and the conductor would permit current to flow. If you took a piece of wire and touched it to the terminals of a good battery, current would flow. It takes just those two things to create a current.
A battery.
A voltage source is anything that provides a voltage; for example a cell or battery, or an electrical outlet in your home.
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A conductor carries the voltage potential from the source to the load, i.e. the wires from a circuit breaker to a light.
battery A generator electrical outlet solar panel wind turbine or any source a voltage can be obtained.
Voltage Source
If the EMF or voltage source is removed from a conductor, the electron flow will eventually stop. This is because the EMF or voltage source provides the force that drives the movement of electrons through the conductor. Without this force, the electrons will no longer be pushed and will come to a rest.
The energy that moves the charges in a circuit comes from the power source, typically a battery or generator. This power source creates a voltage difference, which pushes the electric charges through the conductor in the circuit.
Batteries will provide a source of constant voltage. A battery also can be used to produce an electrical current immediately upon a necessary connection.