Discover the Basics of Alternating Current in Electrical Circuits

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SUMMARY

This discussion provides a comprehensive overview of Alternating Current (AC) in electrical circuits, contrasting it with Direct Current (DC). AC current periodically reverses direction, while DC current flows in a single direction. The discussion uses analogies, such as a rotating paddle and a circular track of balls, to illustrate these concepts. Key terms introduced include "Period" and "Frequency," which are essential for understanding AC behavior.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of basic electrical concepts, including voltage and current.
  • Familiarity with Direct Current (DC) and Alternating Current (AC) definitions.
  • Knowledge of electrical circuit components, such as batteries and wires.
  • Basic grasp of periodic functions and their significance in electrical engineering.
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the mathematical representation of AC waveforms, including sine and cosine functions.
  • Learn about the relationship between frequency and period in AC circuits.
  • Explore the applications of AC in household and industrial electrical systems.
  • Investigate the differences in power transmission between AC and DC systems.
USEFUL FOR

Electrical engineering students, educators, and anyone interested in understanding the fundamentals of electrical circuits and the behavior of AC and DC currents.

RuroumiKenshin
What is alternating current?
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
http://www.geocities.com/vijayakumar777/electricity/electricity.html

Or for the quick and easy version...

Analogies!

Imagine a circular track full of ballbearings or marbles or something. All packed in tight, so if you push on anyone of them, they all move around the track.

Now imagine that over a section of that track is a waterwheel-type thing; a wheel with paddles or cogs spaced so as to come down between balls as the wheel turns, and give them a push around the track. DC current is that wheel; it goes around in one direction and pushes the balls (charge) around the track in one direction constantly.

Now imagine that instead of that waterheel type thing, we have a pin or axis rotating about the vertical axis above that section of the track, with a paddle poking out to one side. The pin is in the track, so that as it turns, the paddle pushes the ring of balls first one way, then the other, constantly changing direction. This is AC current. At any point along the track, at any moment, there will be balls coming toward that point or moving away from that point, depending on which way along the track you are looking.
 
or for the nonanalogical...

Let me first define direct-current, or DC, voltage sources. A direct-current source has a positive end and a negative end, i.e. a battery, and when a wire is attached to both ends, (called a closed circuit,) electrons flow from the negative end to the positive end.

For an alternating-current, or AC, voltage source, it works the same way except that the positive end and negative end keep trading places periodically. That is, at first the positive end is at the "top" and the negative end at the "bottom", the current flows from the bottom to the top, then it alternates and the "top" is now negative with the "bottom" positive and the current flows from the top to the bottom. Then it alternates again, and again, and again...
The time it takes to switch the positive and negative "sides", or terminals, we call the Period of the AC current, from this we can get the Frequency of the AC current, which is 1/Period.
 

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