Physics, asked by sprasoon484, 6 months ago

a) What do positive terminal and negative terminal stand for in current electricity, when negatively
charged electrons are flowing through an electric circuit?​

Answers

Answered by kanak792
2

This is the basis of current electricity. Negatively- charged electrons are removed from atoms, the atoms being left as positive ions. ... The electrons are stored at the negative terminal of the battery and the positive ions at the positive terminal, so there is a potential difference between the two ends.

☺✌please Mark me as Brainlist and follow me on brainly ✌☺

Answered by TheWizard
12

\huge\mathfrak\pink{★AnsWer:}

This is the basis of current electricity. Negatively-

charged electrons are removed from atoms, the atoms

being left as positive ions. The potential difference

between the two causes the electrons to be attracted

back, producing a flow of electric charge: current

electricity.

A good example is a battery. Inside a battery,

electrons have been chemically removed from atoms.

The electrons are stored at the negative terminal of the

battery and the positive ions at the positive terminal, so

there is a potential difference between the two ends.

Similar questions