All Questions
54
questions
3
votes
6
answers
2k
views
Is electric current actually the flow of electrical charge?
In my high school, the definition of electrical current is "the flow of charges" but I have seen a video about how electricity actually works and it seems to me that electrical current is ...
0
votes
1
answer
42
views
Do electrons move faster towards the end of a circuit?
As 1 coulomb electrons go through 1 volt of potential difference, they gain 1 joule of energy. So in s series circuit, do electrons move faster towards the end of the circuit where they went though a ...
0
votes
0
answers
34
views
Is there electric field inside the conductor in moving charges case?
Is there an electric field inside a conductor when steady current passes through it ?
I have two conflicting notions here : I was watching this Electroboom video and at minute $14:00$ electroboom ...
2
votes
2
answers
127
views
Is it necessary for circuit to be closed in order for current to flow?
In case of earthing, we attach a single wire to the earth and if some residual electrons remain in the instrument they flow to the earth until the potential of the instrument also becomes Zero. So if ...
0
votes
0
answers
27
views
Can you measure different currents at different contact points for a volume of material made of two different metals with different conductivities?
My question is about the variation of conductivity in a volume of material and its effect on measured current. A volume is comprised of two metals joined symmetrically in a cuboid shape as in the ...
1
vote
2
answers
92
views
Energy conversions in Electric furnace
Heating furnaces use eddy current to work, but I have a problem understanding something, what are the energy conversions that happen in the electric furnace? Is it magnetic->electric->thermal or ...
0
votes
4
answers
84
views
About electric field and electric potential
We know that electric potential is the negative of work done by electric field in moving a unit charge from infinity to that place.
This statement shows that electric field causes a potential ...
0
votes
3
answers
1k
views
How does current actually flow in a wire?
When I was in my school I was taught that the electric field due to the battery is along the wire (from $A \rightarrow B \rightarrow C \rightarrow D $) and these are responsible for electrons at each ...
0
votes
1
answer
191
views
Motion of the electrons in a electric conductor when connected to a potential difference?
(I am a beginner in physics, so please forgive me if this is stupid.) Normally, under static electric state there is no resultant electric field existing inside a conducting material. But, when a ...
0
votes
1
answer
89
views
How Electric field is generated inside wire when a voltage source is connected to it? [closed]
I have found by my searches that the electric field inside wire is generated by the positive or negative charges accumulated at the surface of wire.
My question is, Why do charge get accumulated on ...
0
votes
1
answer
45
views
How does the electric field pattern looks like when current is moving inside the conductor and why this field is uniform?
We know that electric field is uniform inside a normal electric circuit consisting of some battery source and a conducting wire , $\mathrm{E}$ will be $\mathrm{E=V/d}$ , but I cannot think of a reason ...
0
votes
3
answers
100
views
What is the definition of direction of current?
Wikipedia defines the direction of current as:
The direction of conventional current is arbitrarily defined as the direction in which positive charges flow.
But suppose a region where there is a non-...
1
vote
1
answer
280
views
Does the number of electrons colliding in wire get double as the length of wire gets doubled?
Does the number of electrons colliding in a wire get doubled when length of wire is made twice with its area of cross-section remain constant.
My calculations for this are:-
For wire of length $L$ and ...
2
votes
2
answers
329
views
We know that $R={\rho l/A}$ but how do you define L and A, Area of cross section?
How do we define area of cross section of a conductor for resistance of a metal piece.
When you a wire which is generally cylindrical you have a length of it. Its area of cross section is a circle ...
1
vote
1
answer
24
views
In applications where heating is not the required from of energy, current is to be kept low as per Joules law. What energy is considered useful?
As per this paragraph from Wikipedia
"Joule heating is referred to as ohmic heating or resistive heating because of its relationship to Ohm's Law. It forms the basis for the large number of ...