there is a difference in electrical potential energy.
You apply a voltage across a load and the result is that a current flows through the load. So you must have the voltage present, the cause, before current flow, the effect. Think of voltage as pressure and current as flow.
Everything Depends on the voltage supply ...... Current flow (Amp) = Watt / Voltage the Current flow will be 1 amp if voltage is 1 V the Current flow will be 0.5 amp if voltage is 2 V the Current flow will be 0.25 amp if voltage is 4 V and so on.......
A difference of potential (voltage) and a conductor connected to the voltage source will cause current flow. Not that you'd want to "short out" a voltage source with a piece of wire, but just the source of voltage and the conductor would permit current to flow. If you took a piece of wire and touched it to the terminals of a good battery, current would flow. It takes just those two things to create a current.
Reverse voltage is voltage is applied in reverse. Instead of the positive voltage going into the anode lead of a component, it goes into the cathode lead of the component.
Putting capacitors in series and then applying a DC voltage to them is not entirely useful. The voltage will cause a small current to flow into the capacitors, charging them to a total cumulative voltage of 200V. No further current will flow. If a meter is applied to one of the capacitors it's charge will cause a voltage measurement but it will quickly drop as the current flowing into the meter discharges the capacitor.
This causes flow because voltage is what powers a circuit
A voltage will cause electrons or other charge carriers to flow (if there is a path through which they can flow). In other words, it will cause a current.
voltage is applied to a conductor to cause a current flow
You apply a voltage across a load and the result is that a current flows through the load. So you must have the voltage present, the cause, before current flow, the effect. Think of voltage as pressure and current as flow.
Voltage provides the "pressure" to push current "flow" through the circuit resistance.
An increase in voltage or a decrease in resistance will cause an increase in current flow in a simple series circuit. This is because current is directly proportional to voltage and inversely proportional to resistance according to Ohm's Law.
Voltage causes the flow of electric current in a circuit. It is the driving force that pushes electrons through a conductor, allowing electrical devices to operate. The higher the voltage, the more current will flow through the circuit.
Everything Depends on the voltage supply ...... Current flow (Amp) = Watt / Voltage the Current flow will be 1 amp if voltage is 1 V the Current flow will be 0.5 amp if voltage is 2 V the Current flow will be 0.25 amp if voltage is 4 V and so on.......
It's called back EMF or reverse EMF. The EMF is electro-motive force, or voltage. What is happening is that the original current flow creates a magnetic field. That field then induces a voltage that opposes the original voltage that is causing the current flow. This back EMF "resists" the original voltage's efforts to cause current flow. If the created magnetic field did not oppose the original "efforts" of the voltage source to make current flow, then it would aid that voltage to make current flow. We would then get something for nothing and perpetual motion would be possible. We can't do that.
A difference of potential (voltage) and a conductor connected to the voltage source will cause current flow. Not that you'd want to "short out" a voltage source with a piece of wire, but just the source of voltage and the conductor would permit current to flow. If you took a piece of wire and touched it to the terminals of a good battery, current would flow. It takes just those two things to create a current.
10 volts applied to 5 ohms would cause a current flow of 2 amperes. Current = voltage divided by resistance.
no...current is a flow of electricity