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 source and the wire is the conductor in the circuit.
The first thing you need to know is the internal resistance of the current source, the voltage source will have the same internal resistance. Then compute the open circuit voltage of the current source, this will be the voltage of the voltage source. You are now done.
There is no particular benefit for having a higher open-circuit (or 'no-load') voltage. In fact, an ideal voltage source would have no internal resistance and, therefore, its open-circuit voltage would be identical to its closed-circuit voltage.
A complete path and a voltage source.
Voltage source: is any source that voltage and amperage come from. Resistor: is any part of a circuit that consumes that energy!
depend on the R value(s) because V Source = Sum of individual voltage across each R in the series so if R in the series are equal value, then their V are the same and their V total will be equal of the V Source
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.
The battery is the voltage or power source, the wires form the conductor.
An electrical circuit must be complete i.e it must form a closed loop,for it to work. Current only flow if the circuit is complete. A complete circuit is one that consist of a Voltage source, a consumer like a bulb and conductors. The conductor then connects the consumer and the voltage source together forming a closed loop.
An electrical circuit must be complete i.e it must form a closed loop,for it to work. Current only flow if the circuit is complete. A complete circuit is one that consist of a Voltage source, a consumer like a bulb and conductors. The conductor then connects the consumer and the voltage source together forming a closed loop.
are you dum?a circuit with a source of energy and at least one conductor is blah.
The first thing you need to know is the internal resistance of the current source, the voltage source will have the same internal resistance. Then compute the open circuit voltage of the current source, this will be the voltage of the voltage source. You are now done.
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"
voltage source and current source
Yes, you can use more than one source of voltage in a circuit. You can also use more than one source of current in a circuit. In fact, complex circuit analysis can utilize Norton and Thevanin equivalents to convert part of the circuit from current source to voltage source and vice versa, allowing you to eventually understand the complete circuit.
powerAnswerVoltage.
A multiwire branch circuit is consist`of two or more ungrouded conductors that has voltage between them and has a grounded conductor that is eoual voltage between each conductor connect to the neutral and it,s ground