Science, asked by rohit1968, 9 months ago

why ampere is decided as flow of charges instead of number of charges​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3

Explanation:

The idea that "Amperes are more real" also appears subtly all through non- science electronics texts, where authors focus on current, on amperes. They talk constantly about the flowing motion of "current," and only ever mention the flowing charge.

The misconception has spread so far that it has infected electrical engineering. Our textbooks teach us about "current carriers," and the law of "conservation of current" in circuits. Neither one exists. Charge-carriers exist. Charge is conserved. But electric current can appear and vanish, and doesn't fall under any conservation law. Conservation of current? Particles made out of current? It's just bizarre!

Also the same distorted concept appears in the widespread conviction that charge is ghostly and unimportant, while electric current is real and substance-like.

And it appears in the idea that electric charge only applies to "static electricity", a phenomenon thought to be mostly useless, (static cling, doorknob sparks) or even dangerous (lightning). Conversely, Electric Current is supposed to apply to modern technology of nearly every kind.

I long have wondered where these various misconceptions arose, but recently I suspect that they have a common origin. I believe that our method of standardizing physical units might be the cause. The common thread of these misconceptions is the fallacy that amperes are more *fundamental* than coulombs, where the word "fundamental" is mistakenly used in a popular sense, rather than with a specialized meaning pertaining to standard physical units: "fundamental" units, versus "derived" units.

In the everyday world, and using a popular meaning of "fundamental," we would say that conserved quantities are more fundamental than rates. For example, Kilograms are more fundamental than KGs/second, volume is more fundamental than flow rate, distance (meters) is more fundamental than speed, Joules of energy are more fundamental than Watts of energy flow, etc. For example, it would be ridiculous to introduce the concept of speed to students who have little understanding of distance or time. Or introduce gallons/second to someone who had never encountered water before.

But in electricity, many believe the opposite, that current is real and that charge is abstract. They'll fight fiercely to defend their belief. Some authors describe Amperes as fundamental units, and point out that Coulombs are derived from Amperes. They may introduce the Ampere to students who have no grasp of the Coulomb. They write as if "electricity" is always measured in Amperes, while also writing that charge is an abstract and hard-to-understand concept involving a strange unit called ...not the Coulomb, but instead, the Ampere-second. (Charge, it's amperes TIMES seconds, so charge obviously must be an abstract mathematical concept?)

I say, on the contrary. Coulombs are fundamental, while Amperes are just a convenient simplification, a jargon-term meaning "Coulombs per second." Yes yes, the Coulomb unit is a Derived Standard, while the Ampere unit is a Fundamental Standard. Even so, electric charge is fundamental, and electric current is just the flow-rate of charge. Coulombs are a conserved quantity, like a "stuff," while Amperes are not.

This does seem to violate the statement that "Amperes are fundamental, while Coulombs are derived." But this statement is really saying that "the physical standard for Amperes is directly measured, while the standard for Coulombs is derived from Amperes and Seconds." It's not saying that Amperes are fundamental, it only discusses which unit is easier to measure with precision.

When explaining electricity, I suggest that we avoid trying to teach students about the alternate definitions of the word "fundamental", and avoid teaching about Fundamental versus Derived units (at least in the lower grades). We should stick with the definition of "fundamental" which most students already know. I believe that the inexperienced learner will find much more sense in the statement:

Answered by nskamboj2004
0

Explanation:

we know that ampere is current and all metallic wire contain charges so by this we can't say this wire contains current. so flow of charges is called ampere.

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