| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.34 |
| Score | 0% | 67% |
Electricity cannot flow...
through a circuit under load |
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through a circuit with resistance |
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through a closed circuit |
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through an open circuit |
An electrical circuit is a path through which electricity flows. This path contains one or more components that create a load (something that is using electricity) and that load acts as resistance to the passage of electricity through the circuit. Electricity can only flow through a circuit when the path is closed and cannot flow through an open circuit.
A solid state device has which of the following characteristics?
made entirely from semiconductor material |
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made from a mix of conductive and insulative material |
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made entirely from insulative material |
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made entirely from conductive material |
The transistor is the foundation of modern electronic devices. It is made entirely from semiconductor material (making it a solid state device) and can serve many different functions in a circuit including acting as a switch, amplifier, or current regulator. A transistor works by allowing a small amount of current applied at the base to control general current flow from collector to emitter through the transistor.
Which of these materials is not a good conductor of electricity?
gold |
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air |
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tin |
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copper |
All conductors have resistance and the amount of resistance varies with the element. In general, metals make the best conductors of electricity and non-metals make the worst conductors of electricity.
Resistance and current are __________ proportional.
inversely |
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not |
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exponentially |
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directly |
Resistance is opposition to the flow of current and is measured in ohms (Ω). One ohm is defined as the amount of resistance that will allow one ampere of current to flow if one volt of voltage is applied. As resistance increases, current decreases as resistance and current are inversely proportional.
This circuit component symbol represents a(n):
capacitor |
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transformer |
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inductor |
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resistor |
An inductor is coiled wire that stores electric energy in the form of magnetic energy and resists changes in the electric current flowing through it. If current is increasing, the inductor produces a voltage that slows the increase and, if current is decreasing, the magnetic energy in the coil opposes the decrease to keep the current flowing longer. In contrast to capacitors, inductors allow DC to pass easily but resist the flow of AC.