| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.57 |
| Score | 0% | 71% |
Electrical power is measured in:
amperes |
|
coulombs |
|
watts |
|
volts |
Electrical power is measured in watts (W) and is calculated by multiplying the voltage (V) applied to a circuit by the resulting current (I) that flows in the circuit: P = IV. In addition to measuring production capacity, power also measures the rate of energy consumption and many loads are rated for their consumption capacity. For example, a 60W lightbulb utilizes 60W of energy to produce the equivalent of 60W of heat and light energy.
| 450 W | |
| 405 W | |
| 900 W | |
| 495 W |
Capacitors connected in series produce __________ capacitance compared to capacitors connected in parallel.
less |
|
the same |
|
more |
|
no |
Capacitors store electricity and are used in circuits as temporary batteries. Capacitors are charged by DC current (AC current passes through a capacitor) and that stored charge can later be dissipated into the circuit as needed. Capacitors connected in series produce less capacitance than capacitors connected in parallel.
All electricity is the movement of which subatomic particles?
protons |
|
electrons |
|
nuclei |
|
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.
What is the primary difference between a rectifier and an inverter?
a rectifier strips out the AC portion of electricity while an inverter strips out the DC portion |
|
a rectifier converts a DC input to AC while an inverter converts an AC input to DC |
|
a rectifier converts an AC input to DC while an inverter converts a DC input to AC |
|
a rectifier strips out the DC portion of electricity while an inverter strips out the AC portion |
A diode allows current to pass easily in one direction and blocks current in the other direction. Diodes are commonly used for rectification which is the conversion of alternating current (AC) into direct current (DC). Because a diode only allows current flow in one direction, it will pass either the upper or lower half of AC waves (half-wave rectification) creating pulsating DC. Multiple diodes can be connected together to utilize both halves of the AC signal in full-wave rectification.