FRED
Both take current and energy from the power supply and dissipate power.
either one could. it depends witch one you unscrew first.
As Dave says there is no obvious reason to do so. However if you put a 200mA fuse or circuit breaker in series between the supply and the load you will protect the load from pulling more than 200mA from the supply should the load malfunction. That way the load is protected from damaging itself (if that was your concern).
only one dc supply is necessary.Operating point is almost independent of β variation.Operating point stabilized against shift in temperature.
AC supply means the supply voltage is alternating one. Supply has some particular frequency and magnitude. e.g. usual power supply to domestic use DC supply means the supply voltage (or current) is not alternating. It is fixed one. i.e. frequency is zero. e.g. batteries
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A stop switch is wired in series with the power supply and the load.
There are no example metric series in the question on which to supply a possible answer.
See discuss.
A dc series motor with speed control can be connected on ac supply because dc machines are totally reversible.
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#8
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.
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