enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Series and parallel circuits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Series_and_parallel_circuits

    If the light bulbs are connected in parallel, the currents through the light bulbs combine to form the current in the battery, while the voltage drop is 12 volts across each bulb and they all glow. In a series circuit, every device must function for the circuit to be complete. If one bulb burns out in a series circuit, the entire circuit is broken.

  3. Voltage drop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltage_drop

    Consider a direct-current circuit with a nine-volt DC source; three resistors of 67 ohms, 100 ohms, and 470 ohms; and a light bulb—all connected in series. The DC source, the conductors (wires), the resistors, and the light bulb (the load) all have resistance; all use and dissipate supplied energy to some degree. Their physical ...

  4. Pearson–Anson effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson–Anson_effect

    Pearson-Anson oscillator circuit. The Pearson–Anson effect, discovered in 1922 by Stephen Oswald Pearson [1] and Horatio Saint George Anson, [2] [3] is the phenomenon of an oscillating electric voltage produced by a neon bulb connected across a capacitor, when a direct current is applied through a resistor. [4]

  5. Circuit topology (electrical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_topology_(electrical)

    An example of this is the network of figure 1.6, consisting of a Y network connected in parallel with a Δ network. Say it is desired to calculate the impedance between two nodes of the network. In many networks this can be done by successive applications of the rules for combination of series or parallel impedances.

  6. Incandescent light bulb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incandescent_light_bulb

    (Edison needed ownership of the novel claim of lamps connected in a parallel circuit.) [28] [29] The government of Canada maintains that it is Woodward and Evans who invented the lightbulb. [30] On 4 March 1880, just five months after Edison's light bulb, Alessandro Cruto created his first incandescent lamp.

  7. LED circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED_circuit

    The circuit must provide sufficient current to light the LED at the required brightness, but must limit the current to prevent damaging the LED. The voltage drop across a lit LED is approximately constant over a wide range of operating current; therefore, a small increase in applied voltage greatly increases the current.

  8. Electricity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity

    The incandescent light bulb, an early application of electricity, operates by Joule heating: the passage of current through resistance generating heat. Electricity is a very convenient way to transfer energy, and it has been adapted to a huge, and growing, number of uses. [ 75 ]

  9. Circuit diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_diagram

    A circuit diagram (or: wiring diagram, electrical diagram, elementary diagram, electronic schematic) is a graphical representation of an electrical circuit. A pictorial circuit diagram uses simple images of components, while a schematic diagram shows the components and interconnections of the circuit using standardized symbolic representations.