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Electricity (resistance, current, voltage) Instructor: Shelia Chase
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Electricity A form of energy resulting from the existence of charged particles (such as electrons or protons), either statically or as an accumulation.
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Electric Current The flow of electric current Charge flows when there is a potential difference, difference in potential (voltage) between ends of a conductor In solids, electrons carry the flow In fluids, positive and negative ions as well as electrons may flow
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Example If one end of a wire were connected to the ground and the other end placed on a Van de Graaff generator that is charged to a high potential, charge would flow through the wire. This would be brief flow, to have longer flow you would need to maintain the potential difference.
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Potential Difference http://www.youtube.com/watch ?v=F1p3fgbDnkY
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Voltage The voltage source is something that provides the potential difference. If you charge a metal sphere positively, and another negatively, you can develop a large voltage between them. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x PjES-sHwg
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Resistance The current also depends on the resistance that the conductor offers to the flow of the charge- the electrical resistance.
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Resistance Similar to the rate of water flow in a pipe Thick wires have less resistance than thin wires Longer wires have more resistance than short wires.
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Resistance Measured in units called ohms, after Georg Simon Ohm, a German physicist who tested different wires in circuits to see what effect the resistance of the wire had on the current.
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Ohm’s Law Ohm discovered that the current in a circuit is directly proportional to the voltage impressed across the circuit and is inversely proportional to the resistance of the circuit, current = voltage/resistance
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Physics is fun!
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