What is a Resistor & What Does it Do?

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A resistor functions by introducing electrical resistance, akin to friction, which controls the flow of electric current in a circuit. It dissipates energy, often as heat, preventing excessive current that could lead to circuit damage. The discussion highlights that electrical potential energy is not lost but converted into other forms, such as light or heat, during current flow. When a circuit is open, energy remains stored, similar to water behind a dam, until a load is introduced. Overall, resistors play a crucial role in managing current and energy distribution in electrical circuits.
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and what is its purpose? what does a resistor actually do?

My understanding is that electrical resistance is sort of like electrical friction,

or imagine sitting in a car, with your hand out of the window, as the car speeds up, you feel more resistance against your hand, and it takes more energy to hold your hand there as the car gets faster and faster.

the wind in this case is the current, and the hand is feeling the resistance.


Also as the current gets higher, the more electrical resistance it encounters, to get the amount of current 'under control' so to speak so that the resistance doesn't get out of hand, a resistor sort of 'eats' or 'resists' the electrical current, so there isn't too much current and as a result there isn't too much electrical resistance.

Does this make any sense? Am i correct on this?


Also Electrical potential energy is the amount of energy it takes to move charges across a circuit,and that energy is lost while the charges move across the circuit, that energy is lost in 2 ways, its either used up ( converted into light and heat if there is a bulb present) or that energy is lost just carrying the electrical charges over the circuit.

Is this true also?
 
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supernova1203 said:
and what is its purpose? what does a resistor actually do?

Think of a wire made of something that is a perfect conductor. Current can run through it and there is no loss --- no heat generated in the wire because there is a current running through it.

Now add impurities that slow some of the electron flow. That is resistance. It causes heat to be generated in the wire and requires power to "push" the current through the wire.

Resistors control the amount of current in various parts of electrical circuits.

Also as the current gets higher, the more electrical resistance it encounters, to get the amount of current 'under control' so to speak so that the resistance doesn't get out of hand, a resistor sort of 'eats' or 'resists' the electrical current, so there isn't too much current and as a result there isn't too much electrical resistance.

Does this make any sense? Am i correct on this?Also Electrical potential energy is the amount of energy it takes to move charges across a circuit,and that energy is lost while the charges move across the circuit, that energy is lost in 2 ways, its either used up ( converted into light and heat if there is a bulb present) or that energy is lost just carrying the electrical charges over the circuit.

Is this true also?

Conservation of energy is not valid on cosmological scales but it IS valid on local scales such as an electrical circuit, so the energy is NOT lost, it is always converted into something else (usually heat or light).
 
phinds said:
Resistors control the amount of current in various parts of electrical circuits.

Ah...so the resistors are like dams controling the electric current!
phinds said:
Conservation of energy is not valid on cosmological scales but it IS valid on local scales such as an electrical circuit, so the energy is NOT lost, it is always converted into something else (usually heat or light).

hm...so some of the energy i suppose is used in moving those charges themselves , either that or it can be converted into heat/light via a load (for example a lightbulb) and THIS is what is responsible for the electric potential difference Yes?
(correct me if my usage of the word load isn't right)
 
supernova1203 said:
Ah...so the resistors are like dams controling the electric current!
Well, that's not a terrible analogy.

hm...so some of the energy i suppose is used in moving those charges themselves , either that or it can be converted into heat/light via a load (for example a lightbulb) and THIS is what is responsible for the electric potential difference Yes?

No, you have that backwards. It is the potential difference that drives the current, regardless what form the energy expenditure of the current takes.
 
ok so here is a question, if there is no outlet for the energy in a charge, and it returns to negative terminal, does it still lose all that energy? In other words if there is just a circuit by itself, and there is no lightbulb, does it still lose the energy?
 
supernova1203 said:
ok so here is a question, if there is no outlet for the energy in a charge, and it returns to negative terminal, does it still lose all that energy? In other words if there is just a circuit by itself, and there is no lightbulb, does it still lose the energy?

If there is an open circuit ("no lightbulb"), the the electrical potential energy just sits there, exactly as does water behind a dam when the spill-gates are closed.
 
ahhh... thanks!
 
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