Physics, asked by Hardwork, 11 months ago

In a conductor, electrons are flowing from A to B. What is the direction of conventional current? Give justification for your answer.

Class 10: Electricity Chapter

Answers

Answered by Hobae
96

hey there! here is ur answer! Hope it helps!

The direction of flow of electrons is gn to be from A to B, ie, electrons start from A and end at B.

The direction of conventional current is opposite to the flow of electrons.

Therefore, the direction of flow of convention current is from B to A.

Answered by yashaswi084
1

Answer:Conventional current flows from the positive terminal to the negative.

Explanation:

The flow of conventional current is from A to B, that is, it's opposite to the direction of flow of electrons.The direction of conventional current is A to B, since current flows opposite to the direction of flow of electrons. In a metal, flow of electrons carrying negative charge constitutes the current, In metals, the electrons with negative charge carry the current.By convention, we define positive direction of current to be in the direction a positive charge would move. Electrons (with their negative charge) move in the opposite direction of the positive current arrow.

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