What's a "PD"?
Negative terminal is just used as a reference. For a current to flow you have to create a loop, otherwise a "point" is floating with no reference to anything.So the negative terminal is never charged, it is just there to create a PD?
Negative terminal is just used as a reference. For a current to flow you have to create a loop, otherwise a "point" is floating with no reference to anything.
You are confusing charge and voltage. Voltage is relative. It's the difference in charge between two points.
my man remember this analogy water in a tank is different from water flowing in the pipe with a partly closed tap
charge is water in the tank
current is flowing water in the pipe
tap is the voltage that drives the current in the direction of flow
now the no of electrons in a metal bar is charge
the amount of flowing electrons in time is current
the force that drives the current in a direction is called voltage
I think you mean proton.positron
I think you mean proton.
Yes I think that clears it up but I can see why it's so confusing:
charge is water in the tank = this can be either positive negative or neutral and is relative to the atomic state of an element or compound
charge in general of electron is negative
proton is positive
and neutron is neutral
current is flowing water in the pipe = This is relative to the electron and the negative moving to positive
primarily flow of current is taken in a direction opposite to the direction of motion of electrons
that is a bit confusing but it is true
tap is the voltage that drives the current in the direction of flow This is a relative term and is the difference of charge between two points
voltage is not exactly that
now the no of electrons in a metal bar is charge I thought a positron can also be a charge, such as in silicon and NPN, PNP transistors?
positron is not considered in trannies only holes are considered and in general when it comes to current in pure metallic conductors charge always represent no of electrons.
in semi conductors holes and electrons are considered that is it
the amount of flowing electrons in time is current= Amps, which is the amount of electrons moving past a point in one second
true
the force that drives the current in a direction is called voltageand that's the difference of charge between two points.
I think I have it now, please tell me if I'm still wrong.
Theses terms aren't as simple as I thought.
P.S. When an electron moves to a positron as negative moves to positive in a battery does that mean the charge decreases?
the charge you know never decreases and all
Thanks Jeffrey
"Ground" in electronic terms is just a common potential.
It can be floating or connected to another common potential. These common potentials are useful because you need a reference point for supplying power and shielding from interference that may be conducted or radiated from different potential reference points.
"Ground" in electrical terms is a common potential that is connected to and "Earthed grounding rod" for local safety reasons.
It becomes a conduit for lightning discharge and a reference point for the transformer neutral , which is also connect through a grounding rod for safety reasons. The ground is not used for AC power transfer but it is used for noise filtering. As much as 0.5mA of AC noise may be conducted from line or neutral to ground wire via filter caps to suppress conducted noise in either direction.
Great stuff Jeffrey. I'm beginning to understand the energy of atoms now.
You're a gent!
Yes Sunny grounding seems to be a slack term. When something "Earths" it discharges a potential that could be hazardous. My problem was when I saw the negative terminal of a battery (in a schematic) as the ground. I didn't realise that the true ground would be, for instance, the ground of a 1/4" audio jack, or the ground of a PCB board. But then again, the larger the voltage the larger the size of a ground right? If lightning struck a small metal sheet it would still fry it but if it struck the eiffel tower there would be more space for the charge to disperse. People think the Eiffel tower would be at zero volts but that is not true because the charge of lightning has shed it's charge elsewhere? The law of physics states nothing is ever lost it is just transferred.
I was confused because if a battery was the ground point, which it isn't right!, it would cause a problem because it would be losing electrons, which are being drawn by the positive terminal of the battery, and thus, lose it's charge gradually and also the P.D will lessen. It will still create current for the circuit but voltage will drop until it "dies"
Thanks
There should be no positrons or protons involved in this discussion. What you really mean is "holes".
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