Do a voltage test. Start at one end of the circuit and progress along device by device. If there is voltage on the down stream side of the device move on to the next. If there is no voltage on the down stream side of the device then go up stream of the device. If you have voltage there then the current device that you are at is the problem causing an open or broken circuit.
no, the circuit won't complete
If the bulb's filament is broken, the whole circuit becomes open. If the bulb is in a series circuit or is the only bulb, the electricity would no longer flow. If the bulb is in a parallel circuit, along with other bulbs, then only the blown bulb would go out, and the other bulbs would still work.
In a series circuit, all bulbs are necessary to complete the circuit. If one bulb goes out, the circuit is broken, so none of the bulbs would light up.
no. you can not fix a broken electric circuit because the wires inside of it would be to badly damaged...and yupperz...your welcome...im bored..im in Friday night scholl:(((..but yeah that's true
A gun would be the most effective method that a normal person would have access to.
The voltmeter is connected parallel to the circuit in order to measure the voltage drop across that circuit or sub-circuit. If you were to connect the volmeter series to the circuit, since it is a high impedance device, it would represent an effective open-circuit condition. You would see the voltage available to the circuit, but the circuit would not receive its intended current and it would not function. Contrast this with the ammeter, which you do place series to the circuit in order to measure the current flow through the circuit.
As long as the voltage between the ends of the circuit remains constant, the current through the circuit is inversely proportional to the total effective resistance of the circuit.
an ideal ammeter has zero or negligible resistance when this is connected in series no effective resistance would be added in the circuit so that the value of curret that we get is exactly of the circuit only. but when the ammeter is connected in parllel as it has zero resistance , the resistor to which it is connected in parllel gets shorted and due to his the effective resistance of the circuit is changed and so the effective current ... due to this the w=value measured by the ammeter would be different (incresed due to dec. in effective resistance)
If the fuse of lamp S went out, the lamps that remain lit would depend on how the circuit is configured. In a series circuit, all lamps would go out since the circuit is broken. In a parallel circuit, only the lamp connected to the same fuse as lamp S would go out, while the other lamps connected to different fuses would remain lit.
If i knew what you were saying i would totally answer that question.
a small cm ruler An effective method to measure a fingernail would be to use a sliding caliper
A closed circuit is one where the current is flowing continuously from the source to the load and back to the source, completing a loop. An open circuit, on the other hand, is one where the current cannot flow because the circuit is broken at some point.