Lightbulb(load),Battery(Power source),Switch,Copper wire
Any devices that are added to a circuit and need the full line voltage to operate, are added in parallel to any other load devices or fixtures in the circuit.
You need a Battery, Light Bulb, Ammeter, Switch.
parallel circuit, a circuit containing two or more subcircuits connected across each other allowing current flow to divide between them, the voltage across all of these subcircuits is identicalseries circuit, a circuit containing two or more subcircuits connected inline with each other allowing the voltage to distribute across them, current flow through all these subcircuits is identicalopen circuit, a circuit with a break (or opening) in it, preventing current from flowingclosed circuit, a circuit with no breaks (its fully closed) in it, permitting current flowshort circuit, a circuit having an unintended low impedance path (or shortcut path) somewhere in it causing current flow to bypass one or more subcircuits within the circuit; this often causes excessive current flow and damage, unless a fuse melts or a circuit breaker pops to create an open circuit and thus protect things
In many cases, yes, it is necessary to measure the conductivity of a material. We need to know how well materials conduct electricity, particularly if these materials are used in the construction of anything electrical or electronic. We need to know what we can use around electrical circuits that won't conduct well, and we need to find things to make up that circuit that are good conductors. Simple, easy to understand.
Efficiency isn't the question. They just do different things. For example, if you look at a typical lighting circuit in a house, all the bulbs on a circuit are in parallel. They each have the same voltage across the bulbs. If you rewired this so that the bulbs were in series then the voltage would be divided across each bulb and if one bulb burned out the others in series would get no current and would not light. If you had two 60Watt bulbs in parallel in your house, each would draw 1/2 Amp. Add another bulb and it would draw 1/2 amp as well, for a total of three 60W bulbs drawing 1.5 amps from the power source. If the same three bulbs were in series there would be 40 Volts across each one with a current of 1/6 amps per bulb. Hence each bulb would be about 1/3 as bright as in the parallel circuit.
Yes.
You need at least two components in your circuit before you can tell whether it's a series circuit or a parallel one.
Any devices that are added to a circuit and need the full line voltage to operate, are added in parallel to any other load devices or fixtures in the circuit.
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You need a Battery, Light Bulb, Ammeter, Switch.
A parallel circuit is different in many ways from a series circuit: 1. In parallel, the voltage across all the devices connected is the same. 2. If a fault occurs in any device connected in parallel combo, then it has no effect on the operation of the other device. 3. In series circuit the current flowing through all the devices is the same while in case of the parallel one the voltage across all the devices is same.
A parallel circuit is used in household wiring. It allows a current to split in half and gives devices just the amount of power they need. This method of wiring is useful for fixing a circuit because the power can flow around the problem and you can fix it.
You need a dashboard and a controller. You need to have a clock in it for it to know when to do things. Needs a circuit in parallel. It has to have a language installed so it understands what it has to do.
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no only series and parallelcircuitAnswerThere are four categories of circuit: series, parallel, series-parallel, and complex. 'Complex circuits' are not necessarily complicated (although they very often are); the term simply describes any circuit (e.g. bridge circuits) that doesn't fall into any of the first three categories and which need to be solved using network theorems.