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ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS All you need to be an inventor is a good imagination and a pile of junk. -Thomas Edison.

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Presentation on theme: "ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS All you need to be an inventor is a good imagination and a pile of junk. -Thomas Edison."— Presentation transcript:

1 ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS All you need to be an inventor is a good imagination and a pile of junk. -Thomas Edison

2 V=IR Ohm’s Law V= Voltage (Volts, V) I= Current (Amperes “amps,” A)
R= Resistance (ohms, Ω) Georg Simon Ohm ( )

3 How you should be thinking about electric circuits:
Voltage: a force that pushes the current through the circuit (in this picture it would be equivalent to gravity)

4 How you should be thinking about electric circuits:
Resistance: friction that impedes flow of current through the circuit (rocks in the river)

5 How you should be thinking about electric circuits:
Current: the actual “substance” that is flowing through the wires of the circuit (electrons!)

6 Would This Work?

7 Would This Work?

8 Would This Work?

9 Closed Circuit A closed circuit is circuit where current can flow in an uninterrupted path. An open circuit is a circuit where current can not flow.

10 Circuit Diagram Scientists usually draw electric circuits using symbols; Battery/ cell lamp switch wires

11 Simple Circuits Series circuit Parallel circuit All in a row
1 path for electricity 1 light goes out and the circuit is broken Parallel circuit Many paths for electricity 1 light goes out and the others stay on

12 Measuring Current Electric current is measured in amps (A) using an ammeter connected in series in the circuit. A

13 Measuring Current A A This is how we draw an ammeter in a circuit.
PARALLEL CIRCUIT SERIES CIRCUIT

14 Measuring Current SERIES CIRCUIT current is the same
at all points in the circuit. 2A 2A PARALLEL CIRCUIT 2A 2A current is shared between the components 1A 1A

15 copy the following circuits and fill in the missing ammeter readings.
? 3A 3A 4A ? 1A ? ? 4A 4A 1A ? 1A

16 Circuit in Diagram Form
+ battery bulb _ current In a closed circuit, current flows around the loop electrons flow opposite the indicated current direction! (repelled by negative terminal) Current flowing through the filament makes it glow. No Loop  No Current  No Light

17 Measuring Voltage The ‘electrical push’ which the cell gives to the current is called the voltage. It is measured in volts (V) on a voltmeter V

18 Measuring Voltage Different cells produce different voltages. The bigger the voltage supplied by the cell, the bigger the current. Unlike an ammeter, a voltmeter is connected across the components Scientist usually use the term Potential Difference when they talk about voltage.

19 Measuring Voltage V V V V
This is how we draw a voltmeter in a circuit. V V V V SERIES CIRCUIT PARALLEL CIRCUIT

20 Series Circuit voltage is shared between the components 3V 1.5V 1.5V

21 Parallel Circuit voltage is the same in all parts of the circuit. 3V

22 Measuring Current & Voltage Practice
copy the following circuits on the next two slides. complete the missing current and voltage readings. remember the rules for current and voltage in series and parallel circuits.

23 Practice a) 6V 4A A V V A

24 Practice b) 6V 4A A V A V A

25 answers a) b) 6V 6V 4A 4A 6V 4A 4A 3V 3V 2A 4A 6V 2A

26 Types of Current Direct Current (DC) Alternating Current (AC)
Charges move in only one direction The current flows from (+) to (-) ends of a battery (electrons move opposite direction) EX: batteries, most digital electronics Alternating Current (AC) The direction of charges/current changes because the terminals change sign rapidly Current vibrates back and forth EX: electricity in homes (120V in the US) AC-if it changed slowly we would see flickering lights

27

28 Electrical Power & Energy

29 The voltage decreases because the current is decreased
The circuit is no longer complete, therefore current can not flow The voltage decreases because the current is decreased and the resistance increases.

30 The current remains the same
The current remains the same. The total resistance drops in a parallel circuit as more bulbs are added The current increases.


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