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If there's a lightbulb it lights up, but basically it lets energy flow through, which completes it.
There are two kinds of circuit closed circuit and open circuit
It works with a connected wire and all the components inside a circuit.
No change in supply voltage as additional resistance is connected in parallel circuit.
It will get very hot if nothing but the battery is connected with wire but it won't explode...., in science class we did this, it's called electricity. All you're doing is making an electric circuit. Try connecting wire to a lightbulb, and touch the battery on both ends with the wire also. It will light the lightbulb up. Maybe go back to elementary school. lol
a circuit is a round wire that connects through a battery into a lightbulb
The on-off switch on your nightstand, which is connected in series with the lightbulb.
The load of a flashlight is the bulb.
Turn a bit of it into a wire and hook it up in a simple circuit with a lightbulb and a battery. If the lightbulb lights up, it's a conductor. If the lightbulb stays dark it's not.
Battery, switch, wires, lightbulb, etc. Those are SOME parts of a circuit....
An ammeter is always connected in series in the circuit.
the circuit would not be complete. the lightbulb would not light or the buzzer would not buzz
A circuit in which loads are connected side by side is known as a parallel circuit.
it is connected in a box
Voltmeters are connected to simple series circuits the same way they are connected to any circuit. They are connected in parallel with the portion of the circuit for which you wish to measure the voltage drop.
In principle, it is infinite. I have not connected a parallel circuit in ages.
Two or more electrical components connected together is called a circuit. Depending on how components are connected, it is either an open circuit, closed circuit, or a short circuit.