A little confusion with parallel circuits

In summary, when two wires are connected in parallel, one double the length of the other, it means that the longer wire has double the resistance. According to Kirchhof's law, the current going in the two wires is the same as the current coming out, but since one wire is double the length, the current will take double the time to reach its end. This means that the current coming out should be lower than the current going in since it takes more time for electrons to travel through the longer wire. However, the speed of electrons is very slow and the delay is only noticeable in extremely long wires. Additionally, the equations for electricity only apply after everything has "settled down," which means that the current has reached a steady
  • #1
KingCrimson
43
1
suppose that you have to wires connected in parallel, one double the length of the other
now that means that the longer wire has double resistance .
according to kirchhof's law , the current going in the two wires is the same as the current coming out , but if one is double the length of the other , that means that current will take double the time to reach its end .
so if we measure the current going in and coming out in 1 sec for instance
the current coming out should be lower than the current going in since it takes more time for electrons to travel through the longer wire
unless either electrons travel faster in the longer wire , which i don't think is the case
or that current intensity has nothing to with the speed of electrons * or charges to be more accurate *
if it doesn't , then will you please correct me ?
 
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  • #2
Hi
welcome to PF :smile:

but if one is double the length of the other , that means that current will take double the time to reach its end .
so if we measure the current going in and coming out in 1 sec for instance

No, doesn't work that way
The speed of the electrons is very slow ... google ... "electron drift"

an easier way to look at it is for every electron that enters one end one pops out the other end

The Electromagnetic field travels at near the speed of light along the wires. just a tiny propagation delay that over even reasonable lengths of wire ... many km's you wouldn't notice the delay.
only when you get many 100's to 1000's of km's you can start to measure or physically notice the difference

cheers
Dave
 
  • #3
davenn said:
Hi
welcome to PF :smile:
No, doesn't work that way
The speed of the electrons is very slow ... google ... "electron drift"

an easier way to look at it is for every electron that enters one end one pops out the other end

The Electromagnetic field travels at near the speed of light along the wires. just a tiny propagation delay that over even reasonable lengths of wire ... many km's you wouldn't notice the delay.
only when you get many 100's to 1000's of km's you can start to measure or physically notice the difference

cheers
Dave

Actually, that delay you refer to is much easier to see than that (with modern equipment, of course). A time domain reflectometer uses a step function with a rise time of a few ps. If you repeat this experiment, using a TDR in ' transmission mode', rather than on reflection, you can easily see the pulse arrive on a path through a 20cm wire in half the time that the pulse arrives on a 40cm parallel path.

It's a shame that 'they' don't point out, in the very first lessons on electricity, that all the simple DC equations only apply after everything has settled down. The 'how does it know?' question is easily answered if students are aware of this settling process, from the very start in their learning.

Of course, the fashion for starting the learning about Electricity in terms of moving electrons - rather than 'current' - is responsible for a lot of this sort of problem. How I wish each Teacher who tells kids about electrons moving along wires, was just a bit better informed about the nature of electron conduction. The point of 'simplification' is surely to make things more simple and not to open so many trap doors for the uninformed to fall into.

or that current intensity has nothing to with the speed of electrons or that current intensity has nothing to with the speed of electrons
Absolutely, KingCrimson!
 
  • #4
sophiecentaur said:
Actually, that delay you refer to is much easier to see than that (with modern equipment, of course). A time domain reflectometer uses a step function with a rise time of a few ps. If you repeat this experiment, using a TDR in ' transmission mode', rather than on reflection, you can easily see the pulse arrive on a path through a 20cm wire in half the time that the pulse arrives on a 40cm parallel path.

It's a shame that 'they' don't point out, in the very first lessons on electricity, that all the simple DC equations only apply after everything has settled down. The 'how does it know?' question is easily answered if students are aware of this settling process, from the very start in their learning.

Of course, the fashion for starting the learning about Electricity in terms of moving electrons - rather than 'current' - is responsible for a lot of this sort of problem. How I wish each Teacher who tells kids about electrons moving along wires, was just a bit better informed about the nature of electron conduction. The point of 'simplification' is surely to make things more simple and not to open so many trap doors for the uninformed to fall into.

Absolutely, KingCrimson!

Exactly , sadly most of the time simplification is just "give them an analogy of an observable process so they can relate even though it has nothing to do with what we are dealing with "
anyway , back to my problem , if the two wires connected in parallel , have the same surface area but one of them have double the resistance , that means that the guy with double the resistance would have half the numbers of electrons flowing , right ?
btw what do you mean by settled down ??because "how does it know "is a question that has bothered me a lot with electricity
 
  • #5
KingCrimson said:
Exactly , sadly most of the time simplification is just "give them an analogy of an observable process so they can relate even though it has nothing to do with what we are dealing with "
anyway , back to my problem , if the two wires connected in parallel , have the same surface area but one of them have double the resistance , that means that the guy with double the resistance would have half the numbers of electrons flowing , right ?
btw what do you mean by settled down ??because "how does it know "is a question that has bothered me a lot with electricity

If you consider a circuit consisting of a large Capacitor, being charged by a large resistor, you would have no problem, I imagine, in accepting that, until the capacitor was fully charged, the circuit would be in a state of change. So, make the capacitor very small, the resistance very small (as with lengths of wire) and bear in mind that where will be some inductance due to the leads etc., then wouldn't it be reasonable to expect that to take some time before the circuit reached a steady state.
What is it about using the word "electrons" that makes you think that an explanation of this is somehow, deeper or better?
If you look in textbooks and reputable websites like Hyperphysics, you will not find the way circuits behave, described in terms of electron flow. Why not just go along with the concept of Electric Current and 'charge' and deal with circuit behaviour at that level. I need hardly point out that a current can flow when either positive or negative charged particles, other than electrons, flow. They can all be treated by using 'Current' as the relevant quantity - and pretty much every such situation is studied on the basis of current. No one denies that electrons are the major charge carriers under most circumstances in our lives but they are an unnecessary complication.
You will be aware that the electrons travel very slowly through the wire and that the impulse of current from one end to the other is almost traveling at c. (btw, I think you mean Cross Sectional Area and not "surface area") There are two issues - one is the amount of current that will flow in the respective wires and the other is the time taken for the change to propagate. Neither need involve the concept of electrons. If you really want to think about "how many electrons" flow, you can convert from Current to Electrons per second whenever you want but why would you want to? You will not find many electrical meters which are calibrated in "Electrons per second". Why do you think that is?
 
  • #6
Actually, that delay you refer to is much easier to see than that (with modern equipment, of course). A time domain reflectometer uses a step function with a rise time of a few ps. If you repeat this experiment, using a TDR in ' transmission mode', rather than on reflection, you can easily see the pulse arrive on a path through a 20cm wire in half the time that the pulse arrives on a 40cm parallel path.

yep that's true ... have used TDR's for cable fault finding in the telecoms field in years gone by... but generally looking at distances of several km's or more
In light of the OP context (electrons racing at high speed along wires etc), I decided not to get into TDR measurements

Dave
 
  • #7
sophiecentaur said:
If you consider a circuit consisting of a large Capacitor, being charged by a large resistor, you would have no problem, I imagine, in accepting that, until the capacitor was fully charged, the circuit would be in a state of change. So, make the capacitor very small, the resistance very small (as with lengths of wire) and bear in mind that where will be some inductance due to the leads etc., then wouldn't it be reasonable to expect that to take some time before the circuit reached a steady state.
What is it about using the word "electrons" that makes you think that an explanation of this is somehow, deeper or better?
If you look in textbooks and reputable websites like Hyperphysics, you will not find the way circuits behave, described in terms of electron flow. Why not just go along with the concept of Electric Current and 'charge' and deal with circuit behaviour at that level. I need hardly point out that a current can flow when either positive or negative charged particles, other than electrons, flow. They can all be treated by using 'Current' as the relevant quantity - and pretty much every such situation is studied on the basis of current. No one denies that electrons are the major charge carriers under most circumstances in our lives but they are an unnecessary complication.
You will be aware that the electrons travel very slowly through the wire and that the impulse of current from one end to the other is almost traveling at c. (btw, I think you mean Cross Sectional Area and not "surface area") There are two issues - one is the amount of current that will flow in the respective wires and the other is the time taken for the change to propagate. Neither need involve the concept of electrons. If you really want to think about "how many electrons" flow, you can convert from Current to Electrons per second whenever you want but why would you want to? You will not find many electrical meters which are calibrated in "Electrons per second". Why do you think that is?

the problem is that i have been taught to think of current in terms of flowing electrons , i know this builds up lots of problems , but i seem to have no other way ,
even if i think of charges , i have also been taught that a charge unit * coulomb * is a bunch of electrons , so that takes me back to the electron point of view .
i have tried to think of current in terms of flow of electric potential but that seems to be harder
, Would you care to explain to me what a charge is ? and how it propagates ?
i am sick of imagining charges as a bunch of electrons moving because as i stated before it builds lots of problems when you think of it deeper , like Why do electrons split up in a parallel circuit , why don't all of them take the wire with least resistance , but then again its not about just moving electrons .
if you have a link to a book , article , forum thread or website that explains what a charge is and how it propagates , i would be really grateful if you could supply such link * or if you even explain it yourself if it's okay "and yea i did mean cross sectional area , forgive my A.D.D.
 
  • #8
davenn said:
The Electromagnetic field travels at near the speed of light along the wires. just a tiny propagation delay that over even reasonable lengths of wire ... many km's you wouldn't notice the delay.
only when you get many 100's to 1000's of km's you can start to measure or physically notice the difference

I don't know who "you" refers to in this case but your statement is not true for extremely high speed electronics. Modern computers depend on having circuit elements VERY close together to avoid having the delay cause problems. When home computers first came out (build your own from various cards in a card rack), for example, memory would be on a separate card from the CPU and the signals had to travel many inches, possibly even a foot. But that worked just fine because the computers were so slow. If you were to move the memory chips that far away in today's computers, the operations would stop working because the delay would be too great.
 
  • #9
KingCrimson said:
the problem is that i have been taught to think of current in terms of flowing electrons , i know this builds up lots of problems , but i seem to have no other way ,
even if i think of charges , i have also been taught that a charge unit * coulomb * is a bunch of electrons , so that takes me back to the electron point of view .
i have tried to think of current in terms of flow of electric potential but that seems to be harder
, Would you care to explain to me what a charge is ? and how it propagates ?
i am sick of imagining charges as a bunch of electrons moving because as i stated before it builds lots of problems when you think of it deeper , like Why do electrons split up in a parallel circuit , why don't all of them take the wire with least resistance , but then again its not about just moving electrons .
if you have a link to a book , article , forum thread or website that explains what a charge is and how it propagates , i would be really grateful if you could supply such link * or if you even explain it yourself if it's okay "and yea i did mean cross sectional area , forgive my A.D.D.

If you want to find out "what charge is", then google "Electrical Charge Meaning". You will find hits at all levels. If you want a fundamental definition then you are in the same neck of the woods as "What is Mass?", "What is Energy?" and"What is time?", all of which questions can be 'answered' - or at least discussed till the cows come home.
Would it help to put this electron / current thing to bed if I suggest that you put it the other way round and say "When electrons flow, there is an electric current". That is true but allows other things to be involved in Current. Current, being the flow of charge past a point or through an area of conductor, is more fundamental than the medium it uses. Maxwell's Equations take all the Electrical quantities and show, extremely well, the relationships between them and time - without ever mentioning an electron.
I think you may be after an answer to this that is too simple to be worth while. If you actually start to use the methods associated with "Electrical Studies' and circuit theory then you will see that it is perfectly possible to use the accepted terms and to arrive at a working system of knowledge. There is not a satisfactory quasi-mechanical explanation for this stuff and I think this is what you are really after. I can only suggest you read lots more about this.
 
  • #10
I don't know who "you" refers to in this case but your statement is not true for extremely high speed electronics. Modern computers depend on having circuit elements VERY close together to avoid having the delay cause problems. When home computers first came out (build your own from various cards in a card rack), for example, memory would be on a separate card from the CPU and the signals had to travel many inches, possibly even a foot. But that worked just fine because the computers were so slow. If you were to move the memory chips that far away in today's computers, the operations would stop working because the delay would be too great.

yes, I agree, and that isn't in dispute

BUT Once Again ... in the context of what the OP was asking/stating, that isn't the most important factor around what was being stated


Dave
 
  • #11
davenn said:
yes, I agree, and that isn't in dispute

BUT Once Again ... in the context of what the OP was asking/stating, that isn't the most important factor around what was being stated


Dave

We cannot know what was in the OPs mind, precisely, but I would say that, as soon as you are dealing with non steady state, the delay becomes relevant. Phase shift is a consideration in virtually all circuitry, at some stage. This time delay simply has to be introduced in any argument or explanation about 'how a circuit knows' what to do.
 
  • #12
I give up !

If you guys want to make a simple thing so complex ... go for it
he asked something really basic and you guys turned it into rocket science :frown:

Dave
 
  • #13
davenn said:
I give up !

If you guys want to make a simple thing so complex ... go for it
he asked something really basic and you guys turned it into rocket science :frown:

Dave
I'm afraid that, basically, it really is as hard as rocket science.
We gave the message that the model of electrons moving through a wire is totally inadequate for dealing with the OP's question. Then the idea of EM fields and waves was introduced - to explain the delay. It then got more complicated. But he who rides the tiger cannot dismount.

You either have to take things on trust or go with the 'correct' (i.e. the accepted view) explanation and you cannot really pick and choose with Science.
 
  • #14
If you need to think in terms of electron charges, then think of the wire as a tube full of marbles. As you push a marble in this end, one falls out that end (not instantaneously, but as quickly as a sound wave could travel through those marbles). Push two marbles per second into one end, and two marbles per second fall out of the other end. This will happen no matter how tightly the marbles fit into the tube. If the resistance of the tube increases, and you keep pushing with the same amount of force, you will no longer be able to push two marbles per second. Yet, for every marble you push in the entrance, one will fall out of the exit. If the tube is very tight, or very long (increased resistance), you may only be able to push 1 marble per second through the tube. If you push harder (increased voltage), maybe you can get 10 marbles per second through the tube. But in any case, the ratio of input to output remains 1/1, no matter how quickly or how slowly you can push the marbles through.
 
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  • #15
You can get away with the idea of the electrons comprising an incompressible fluid of zero density but you have to avoid any ideas of Kinetic Energy being carried by the electrons. The 'marbles' must be massless.
 
  • #16
thanks , well appreciated , i did spend some time alone and it all makes sense now
@sophiecentaur and @davenn
i wasn't going for the idea of delay and phase shift , i was just talking about normal circuitry and schematics , and also my confusion about current and velocity of electron did add to my confusion about parallel circuits, but knowing about delay and phase shift due to difference in lengths specially in High Speed Electronics did open up a window for me , so thanks everyone for your elaborate explanations
@LURCH thanks , that's the conclusion i arrived at after a little while of thinking and reading
 

What is a parallel circuit?

A parallel circuit is a type of electrical circuit in which there are multiple pathways for the current to flow. This means that the components in the circuit are connected to each other in a way that allows for the current to split and flow through each component simultaneously.

How is a parallel circuit different from a series circuit?

In a parallel circuit, the current has multiple pathways to flow through, whereas in a series circuit, the current has only one pathway. Additionally, in a parallel circuit, the voltage remains the same across all components, while in a series circuit, the voltage is divided among the components.

What happens if one component in a parallel circuit fails?

If one component in a parallel circuit fails, the other components will continue to receive current and function as normal. This is because each component has its own pathway for the current to flow through, allowing for independent operation.

How do you calculate the total resistance in a parallel circuit?

To calculate the total resistance in a parallel circuit, you can use the formula 1/Rt = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + ... + 1/Rn, where Rt is the total resistance and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistances of each component. This formula takes into account the fact that in a parallel circuit, the total resistance is always less than the individual resistances.

What are the advantages of using a parallel circuit?

One advantage of using a parallel circuit is that if one component fails, the other components can continue to function. Additionally, parallel circuits allow for independent operation of components, meaning that if one component is turned off, the others can still function. This also allows for greater control and flexibility in the circuit.

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