Physics, asked by salmanfarooque, 3 months ago

draw a circuit diagram showing a battery ( two cells ) and three bulbs. one bulb must be on all the time and the other two remain independent

Answers

Answered by devindersaroha43
3

Answer:

Explanation:

Once one of the wires is removed from the power source or a “break” is made in the flow, the circuit is now “open” and the lamp will no longer light.

In practical application, circuits are “opened” by such devices as switches, fuses, and circuit breakers. Two general circuit classifications are series and parallel.

The elements of a series circuit are connected end to end; the same current flows through its parts one after another.

Series Circuits

In a series circuit , the current through each of the components is the same, and the voltage across the components is the sum of the voltages across each component.

Series Circuit

An example of a Series Circuit

Parallel Circuits

In a parallel circuit, the voltage across each of the components is the same, and the total current is the sum of the currents through each component.

If two or more components are connected in parallel they have the same potential difference ( voltage) across their ends. The potential differences across the components are the same in magnitude, and they also have identical polarities. The same voltage is applicable to all circuit components connected in parallel.

If each bulb is wired to the battery in a separate loop, the bulbs are said to be in parallel.

Parallel Circuit

An example of a Parallel Circuit.

Circuit Example

Consider a very simple circuit consisting of four light bulbs and one 6 V battery. If a wire joins the battery to one bulb, to a second bulb, to a third bulb, then back to the battery, in one continuous loop, the bulbs are said to be in series. If the three light bulbs are connected in series, the same current flows through all of them, and the voltage drop is 1.5 V across each bulb and that may not be sufficient to make them glow.

Series Circuit Diagram  

If the light bulbs are connected in parallel, the current flowing through the light bulbs combine to form the current flowing in the battery, while the voltage drop is 6.0 V across each bulb and they all glow.

In a series circuit, every device must function for the circuit to be complete. One bulb burning out in a series circuit breaks the circuit. In parallel circuits, each light has its own circuit, so all but one light could be burned out, and the last one will still function.

Answered by hotelcalifornia
3

An electrical circuit is a closed path that includes all the components connected to complete the flow of current.

Explanation:

The circuit consists of:

  • Three bulbs where two bulbs A and B are connected in parallel and bulb A is connected in series connection with the battery.
  • A battery which acts as a source of Direct current. Direct current provides uni-directional current. Here it has two cells.
  • Two plug keys, plug key is a switch which has to be closed so that the circuit completes and current is allowed to flow.
  • Both the plug keys P and Q must be closed for all three bulbs to glow.
  • Bulb A and B are independent as they have their own switch.
  • Bulb C is always glowing because it is connected in a complete circuit.  
  • Current flow direction is shown conventionally which is considered to be opposite of charge flow.
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