well its simple whoever asked this question is thick. It gives charge because a battery is the source of electricity therefore firing up the current and electron.
Yes
Charge flow through a circut
You need a source of electrical potential difference, also known as voltage (which is the technical term for what for you call "electric pressure"). The easiest and most common voltage source is a household battery. Hook up the positive electrode of the battery using a conductor (eg. a copper wire) to one end of your circuit and the negative electrode to the other end, and voila, you'll have electric current flowing through your circuit.
Switches, fuses and circuit breakers are examples of some of the electrical parts which can connect or disconnect a circuit to a source of current. A diode does it for alternating current, but only for one half of each cycle. "Connecting" allows an electric current to flow through the circuit. "Disconnecting" stops an electric current from flowing through the circuit.
if an electric circuit has potential difference. Electricity will flow only if an electrical circuit is closed.
you can see that the battery needs battery so that's why
Yes
A battery will do this, when connected to a closed circuit (for a while).
yes charge flow through the circuit
Charge flow through a circut
Can flow
resistors are used to resist the flow of current in a circuit.......
Electricity can flow in an electric circuit by a battery. The battery creates electrons, which flow through the wire, and then go into a light bulb. (That is how a light bulb in a circuit lights up.) A series circuit is a circuit with one wire that electrons can flow through. Also, there can be more than one light bulb connecting to the same wire. A parallel circuit is a circuit with light bulbs that have their own wire.ClarificationThe above answer, unfortunately, perpetuates the myth that current leaves a battery, and finds its way around a circuit. This is not the case at all. It is the load that 'draws' the current from the battery and it is the load that determines the size of that current.
Weak battery doesn't hold charge? Hidden accessory left on i.e. glove box light? Excessive parasytic load? Defective voltage regulator not opening on vehicle shut down? Try; connecting a test light in series with battery - terminal, if light illuminates there is current flow in circuit. Remove fuses one at a time until light goes out, then investigate that circuit
Current is the flow of electric charge or the rate of the flow of an electric charge through a conductor.
it is necessary to connect both the terminals of a battery to a circuit for current to flow through it..!!
If you did not have a battery, the circuit would not have any electricity to make a change on something. Basically, a battery is a power source. It creates a difference in charge (positive and negative ends) that causes a flow or electrons through the wire which is electricity!