In this case current flows from a high voltage to a lower voltage in a circuit.
Fuse is a circuit element which disconnects the electrical current from the mains"supply" feeding the load when a condition of fault "short circuit " occurs. one behaviour of electric current that it flows undivided in circuit elements connected in series and is divided when flows in circuit elements connected in parallel. so in order to protect a circuit fuse MUST be connected in series to cut/disconnect the faulty current in a safe/short time. if u connect a fuse in parallel to a component then u will be shorting that component and the component will not function ;because the fuse is a thin wire with a negligible resistance and electrical current flows in the most easy "less resistive" component. besides a short circuit will happen immediatly because u connectthe supply to the neutral! hope that helps.
'Non-examples' of a parallel circuit include seriescircuits, series-parallel circuits, and complexcircuits.
The difference between a series and parallel circuit is that a series circuit is connected in such a way that the same current intensity flows through the elements while a parallel circuit is connected in such a way that the same potential appears across their terminals.
Parallel circuits can have more than one way around the circuit I.e. ______O______ |______O_____| |_____|-______| Series circuits only have one way around the circuit I.e. ______O______ |______|-_____| Key: __ or | = wire O = light |- = battery/cell
The current that flows from and back to the power supply in a parallel circuit is called branch current. Each branch in a parallel circuit has its own current flow that combines to form the total current drawn from the power supply.
The current that flows from and back to the power supply in a parallel circuit is called the total current. It splits into different branches based on the resistance of each branch but remains constant throughout the circuit.
True
parallel circuit
True...!
-- The voltage across every circuit element is the same, and is equal to the power supply voltage. -- The current through each circuit element is in inverse proportion to its impedance. -- The sum of the currents through all circuit elements is equal to the power supply current.
... the voltage of the power supply and the resistance of that branch alone.
In this case current flows from a high voltage to a lower voltage in a circuit.
AnswerA series circuit contanis only one circuit in which the current flows through.A parallel circuit contains two circuits, so the current flows through both and if one gap is made to the circuit, the other wire connected to the battery completes it.
Fuse is a circuit element which disconnects the electrical current from the mains"supply" feeding the load when a condition of fault "short circuit " occurs. one behaviour of electric current that it flows undivided in circuit elements connected in series and is divided when flows in circuit elements connected in parallel. so in order to protect a circuit fuse MUST be connected in series to cut/disconnect the faulty current in a safe/short time. if u connect a fuse in parallel to a component then u will be shorting that component and the component will not function ;because the fuse is a thin wire with a negligible resistance and electrical current flows in the most easy "less resistive" component. besides a short circuit will happen immediatly because u connectthe supply to the neutral! hope that helps.
In series circuits, the current flows through each component in a single path, while in parallel circuits, the current splits and flows through multiple paths. This means that the total current in a series circuit is the same throughout, while in a parallel circuit, the total current is divided among the branches.
A single load doesn't really constitute either a series or a parallel circuit. You could argue that the lamp is in series with the supply, because the same current flows through both. But you could also argue that it is in parallel with the supply, as it shares the same voltage. So the terms 'series' and 'parallel' are only really used when to describe how two or more loads are connected to the supply.