Yep. This is because the device needs the battery in order to work.
Yes, a dead battery can break the circuit. A dead battery cannot provide the necessary voltage to power the circuit and keep it running, which will result in the circuit not functioning properly or at all.
For it to meaningfully to be a circuit, electrons must flow round the complete circuit. Thus a source of energy is needed, be it a battery, or the mains electricity.
Yep. This is because the device needs the battery in order to work.
It is most likely a dead battery, especially if there is no power for lights or the radio. Check and clean the battery terminals because corrosion can break the electrical circuit.
Disconnecting a wire from a battery would break the circuit. If the battery was powering a bulb, the lamp would go out.
A dead battery breaks a circuit because it no longer provides the necessary voltage or current to allow electrical flow. When a battery discharges completely, its internal chemical reactions cease, preventing electrons from moving through the circuit. This interruption halts the operation of any connected devices, rendering them inoperative until the battery is recharged or replaced. Essentially, the lack of power disrupts the continuity needed for the circuit to function.
In a battery circuit, the potential energy is stored in the form of chemical potential energy within the battery. This energy is converted into electrical potential energy when the battery is connected in a circuit and used to power devices.
You would have a open circuit. It would appear dead.
Short circuit the connector with a 12V battery for few seconds!
A dead short occurs which can result in the battery exploding A completion in the external circuit of the battery
The purpose of the battery in a circuit is to wive energy to the circuit
If you remove the wire from a battery, you effectively break the circuit, preventing the flow of electric current. The battery will no longer supply power to any connected devices or components. However, the battery itself will remain charged and capable of providing energy once the circuit is reconnected.