| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.99 |
| Score | 0% | 60% |
If an electrical circuit is interrupted, which of the following will result?
open circuit |
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closed circuit |
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short circuit |
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parallel circuit |
A closed circuit is a complete loop or path that electricity follows. It consists of a source of voltage, a load, and connective conductors. If the circuit is interrupted, if a wire is disconnected or cut for example, it becomes an open circuit and no electricity will flow.
The most common circuit configuration is:
series |
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parallel |
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household |
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series-parallel |
Circuits are not limited to only series or only parallel configurations. Most circuits contain a mix of series and parallel segments. A good example is a household circuit breaker. Electrical outlets in each section of the house are wired in parallel with the circuit breaker for that section wired in series making it easy to cut off electricity to the parallel parts of the circuit when needed.
From what energy do photovoltaic cells produce electrical energy?
magnetic |
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nuclear |
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sun |
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chemical |
A photovoltaic cell (also known as a solar cell) converts energy from the sun into electrical energy.
Which of the following allows DC to pass easily but resists the flow of AC?
semiconductor |
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transformer |
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capacitor |
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inductor |
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.
Which of the following is the same for each branch of a parallel circuit?
current |
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power |
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resistance |
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voltage |
In a parallel circuit, each load occupies a separate parallel path in the circuit and the input voltage is fully applied to each path. Unlike a series circuit where current (I) is the same at all points in the circuit, in a parallel circuit, voltage (V) is the same across each parallel branch of the circuit but current differs in each branch depending on the load (resistance) present.