ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 645259 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.30
Score 0% 66%

Review

1

The valence shell of n insulator is how full of electrons?

56% Answer Correctly

half full

less than half full

more than half full

empty


Solution

Insulators have valence shells that are more than half full of electrons and, as such, are tightly bound to the nucleus and difficult to move from one atom to another.


2

The conductivity of an element depends on how many electrons occupy which electron shell?

78% Answer Correctly

inner

middle

first

outer


Solution

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.


3

This circuit component symbol represents a(n):

67% Answer Correctly

transformer

transistor

diode

inductor


Solution

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.


4

An engineer who wants to document an electric circuit would create which of the following?

67% Answer Correctly

a matrix

a schematic

a layout

a blueprint


Solution

A schematic is the proper name for a drawing of an electric or electronic circuit.


5

An inductor __________ changes in the electric current flowing through it.

61% Answer Correctly

doubles

resists

eliminates

enhances


Solution

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.