Short Circuit
The path of electric conductors is called a complete circuit. It lets electrons a path to flow from their source to the load and back again.
rds
the complete path that electricity can move through is called
A cold circuit
Electric currents flow from the source through the circuit and back to the source in materials called conductors.
What components make up an eletrical circuit
a "short" one
If you ground the flow of current like the last part of your question states you will not have a complete circuit as the circuit will open on a short circuit. To make a complete circuit operate you need a power source, an overload device to protect the conductors of the circuit, conductors to carry the current and a load across the power source which causes the current to flow in the circuit. Leave any one of these things out and you will not have a complete circuit.
A circuit can have as little as two components 1 Must have a power source 2. Something for that power source to power, for example a light *Assuming you already know you need wires to complete the circuit
# voltage or current source # load # conductors # closed path(s)
if by parameters, you mean parts, any circuit needs three things. A source, like a battery, a load, like a lightbulb, and conductors, eg. wire.
An electrical circuit is a path which electrons from a voltage or current source flow. Electric current flows in a closed path called an electric circuit. The point where those electrons enter an electrical circuit is called the "source" of electrons. The point where the electrons leave an electrical circuit is called the "return" or "earth ground". The exit point is called the "return" because electrons always end up at the source when they complete the path of an electrical circuit. The part of an electrical circuit that is between the electrons' starting point and the point where they return to the source is called an electrical circuit's "load".Contents[hide] 1 Electrical-circuits2 Electronic circuits3 Circuit-and-wiring-diagrams4 Circuit-breakers5 Ground-fault-interrupt-(GFI)-devices6 Other websites