a conductor
An insulator is a material that does not conduct electricity and will not carry an electric current. Examples of insulators include rubber, plastic, and glass.
An insulator is a material that does not allow electric current to flow through it easily, while a conductor is a material that allows electric current to flow through it easily. Insulators have high resistance to electric current, while conductors have low resistance. This property is determined by the arrangement of electrons in the atoms of the material.
An electrical conductor has the ability to carry an electric current. Most of the best conductors are metals such as copper. Water containing ions can also conduct an electric current (which lead-acid batteries rely on)
Metals conduct electricity because they have free-moving electrons that can carry electric current through the material.
The measure of how much energy electric charges in a current carry is called electric power. It is the rate at which energy is transferred by an electric circuit. The unit of electric power is the watt.
An insulator is a material that does not conduct electricity and will not carry an electric current. Examples of insulators include rubber, plastic, and glass.
Sugar (sucrose) is a material that dissolves in water but does not conduct electric current. Sugar molecules do not ionize in water, so the solution does not carry electric charge.
Materials carry current because of the way the electrons of the material behave. Current is proportional to the number of electrons. If the electrons are loosely bound on the material then they are available to carry current along the material. Copper is a common metal who's configuration means that the electrons are loosely bound and as such is very good at carrying current. If on the other hand the electrons are tightly packed into the atoms in the material then they aren't available to carry current. Materials such as glass and plastic are good examples.
Wire is the transition material used to carry the electric current; the switch is the controller of that current.
An insulator is a material that does not allow electric current to flow through it easily, while a conductor is a material that allows electric current to flow through it easily. Insulators have high resistance to electric current, while conductors have low resistance. This property is determined by the arrangement of electrons in the atoms of the material.
An electrical conductor has the ability to carry an electric current. Most of the best conductors are metals such as copper. Water containing ions can also conduct an electric current (which lead-acid batteries rely on)
Metals are conductive because they have free-moving electrons that can carry electric current easily through the material.
Metals conduct electricity because they have free-moving electrons that can carry electric current through the material.
Electric current carries electric charge. Actually to say it in the right sense, we have to say that electric current is the rate of flow of electric charges
The measure of how much energy electric charges in a current carry is called electric power. It is the rate at which energy is transferred by an electric circuit. The unit of electric power is the watt.
A material through which electrons do not easily travel is called an insulator. Insulators have high resistance to the flow of electric current due to the lack of free electrons available to carry the charge. Examples of insulators include rubber, glass, and plastic.
Yes, a conductor is a material that allows electric current to flow through easily due to the presence of free-moving electrons that can carry the charge. Common examples of conductors include metals like copper and aluminum.