| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.57 |
| Score | 0% | 71% |
Which of the following statements about a capacitor is false?
to discharge a capacitor safely, use a high-wattage resistor comparable to the capacitance of the capacitor |
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a capacitor remains charged even after the input voltage is removed |
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you should always discharge any capacitors before working on an electronic circuit |
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it is safe to touch a capacitor with your hands as long as it is small |
The purpose of a capacitor is to retain electric charge and it will do so even after its input voltage is removed. After the input voltage is removed, the capacitor will slowly discharge but, depending on the size and characteristics of the capacitor, discharging could take from a few minutes to a few years. So, it's never safe to touch a capacitor with your hands and you should make sure to discharge any capacitors in a circuit before working on it using an appropriately high-wattage resistor or a capacitor discharge tool.
The electrical potential difference between two points is called:
current |
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resistance |
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voltage |
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conductance |
Voltage (V) is the electrical potential difference between two points. Electrons will flow as current from areas of high potential (concentration of electrons) to areas of low potential. Voltage and current are directly proportional in that the higher the voltage applied to a conductor the higher the current that will result.
This circuit component symbol represents a(n):
transformer |
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diode |
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transistor |
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inductor |
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.
All electricity is the movement of which subatomic particles?
protons |
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nuclei |
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electrons |
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neutrons |
All electricity is the movement of electrons which are subatomic particles that orbit the nucleus of an atom. Electrons occupy various energy levels called shells and how well an element enables the flow of electrons depends on how many electrons occupy its outer (valence) electron shell.
This circuit diagram represents a(n):
series circuit |
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parallel circuit |
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series-parallel circuit |
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rectifier |
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.