It will increase the ripple factor that the capacitor is in the circuit to smooth out.
when the DC current flows through the capacitor .the leakage of the charges is in capacitor called Dc leakage capacitor .
It will either explode right away, or work for a short time then explode. Note though, that the capacitor's polarity only applies to DC voltage. Because AC flows through a capacitor, if there is no DC offset, it matters not which way the capacitor goes.
No. The speed at which the charger will charge the battery is determined by how many amps the charger outputs.
7.5v 500mA Dc charger
Always DC.
Yes.
In order for a capacitor to pass current, the voltage across it must be changing. In a DC circuit, the voltage does not change so, at equilibrium, the capacitor is effectively an open circuit. We also call this DC blocking. You can take a signal with DC bias on it, perhaps because it came from a class A BJT amplifier, couple it with a capacitor, and the signal will make it through, but the DC bias will not.
if i am not wrong u mean how to block increase in amplitude due to DC, or block DC... you can use a capacitor in series and it will block DC and obly AC signal would pass.. so the DC increase would be removed.. u can check animation and details
When DC power is first applied to an uncharged capacitor it appears as a short circuit.
A: As soon as a DC voltage is applied the capacitor is a short or no voltage
DC does not flow through a capacitor because there is no electrical connection between the plates; they are separated by an insulator calibrated for capacitance.
It is capacitor