Can Zero Electric Potential Prove No Current Flow in a Connected Wire?

AI Thread Summary
In a circuit where two wires are connected at equal electric potential, no current flows through the connecting wire because there is no potential difference to drive the flow of charge. The discussion emphasizes that current requires a difference in charge, similar to how water flows from higher to lower elevation. Even if two resistors have different currents, if they are at the same potential, the connecting wire will not facilitate current flow. The concept of charge accumulation at points A and B is misleading, as current is balanced throughout the circuit, meaning the same amount of charge flows in and out without accumulation. Ultimately, understanding potential differences and their role in current flow is crucial for grasping electrical circuits.
  • #51
But if you have a river splitting into two branches one of them is narrow and the other is wide and then you made connection between them, certainly water will flow from the wide one to the narrow one
This is what you said ,

this is a very important point , imagine a river spliting in half , say an island is seperating the river at some point , one side is narrow the other wide , you say that why doesn't water from the wide part flow back into the narrow part after the split , but think about it, if it could flow into the narrower part after the split then why didn't it flow there right in the beginning before the split ??

The answer is because it couldn't , it didn't have enough force or in our case PD to do that.
The narrower split takes more force to get the same amount of water through than the wide one.

if you have a given PD (volts) you can do only a given amount of work with them.
As current flows it is easier for the current to go through the least resistance and it does exactly so , and no mater before or after it doesn't flow back into the higher resistance just because it is HIGHER.

This is the point, if more current couldn't flow through the higher resistor before it, then why would it do that after it... :)
 
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  • #52
Crazymechanic said:
I must say sophie I'm not sure if the OP understood a single thing from what you just said , I'm not even sure about myself , will have to take a look about this.

That may well be true. But if you want to talk about conduction electrons then you have to talk about thermal electrons in the same model. My post above points out that this simple model of electrons is no better than a water analogy. Just calling the charge carriers electrons is no better than calling them Charge Carriers (unspecific and with simple electrical properties). Just because an explanation gives people an impression of understanding, it may not necessarily be helping them. There's recently been a massive thread about 'how the energy is carried' in which people have aired a range of views and personal explanations, many of them flawed and based pretty much entirely on this hand waving electron model. That thread demonstrates the very thing I am warning about.
 
  • #53
I really do get your point and I got it before long ago when we talked about the same idea on a thread here.

I think this thread is pretty nice as the OP is constantly being pulled back to current and voltage and the basic parts of water and rivers that can be compared to current , and as I said if the OP will understand this and move forward he will be able to talk in more complicated terms and learn them because the simple water analogies will break down at that point but for now let's see what the OP thinks about the answers that have been given in the past minutes in this thread.
 
  • #54
Crazymechanic said:
This is what you said ,

this is a very important point , imagine a river spliting in half , say an island is seperating the river at some point , one side is narrow the other wide , you say that why doesn't water from the wide part flow back into the narrow part after the split , but think about it, if it could flow into the narrower part after the split then why didn't it flow there right in the beginning before the split ??

The answer is because it couldn't , it didn't have enough force or in our case PD to do that.
The narrower split takes more force to get the same amount of water through than the wide one.

if you have a given PD (volts) you can do only a given amount of work with them.
As current flows it is easier for the current to go through the least resistance and it does exactly so , and no mater before or after it doesn't flow back into the higher resistance just because it is HIGHER.

This is the point, if more current couldn't flow through the higher resistor before it, then why would it do that after it... :)
cool nice analogy
 
  • #55
ElmorshedyDr said:
cool nice analogy
I want to read a lot about electron flow behaviors at about circuit where can I find that ?
 
  • #56
I think it would be great to read about current flow, voltage (PD) , look at simple circuits and how they work , trust me wanting to read stuff yu are not ready to understand will not make you understand it.
You need to build the house from the basement not from the roof.
 
  • #57
Crazymechanic said:
I really do get your point and I got it before long ago when we talked about the same idea on a thread here.

I think this thread is pretty nice as the OP is constantly being pulled back to current and voltage and the basic parts of water and rivers that can be compared to current , and as I said if the OP will understand this and move forward he will be able to talk in more complicated terms and learn them because the simple water analogies will break down at that point but for now let's see what the OP thinks about the answers that have been given in the past minutes in this thread.

In the light of the comment by Elmorshedy, below, I wonder how you now feel about things.

ElmorshedyDr said:
I want to read a lot about electron flow behaviors at about circuit where can I find that ?

I would say that you are unlikely to find very much at all. Electron flow within devices is studied, of course, but, as Crazymechanic and I (and others have written), it is current that is the relevant quantity in "circuits". Have you not gathered that from the past few dozen posts?

Would you expect to find a book about Quantum Physics in the design of Steel Bridges? This is, effectively the sort of thing you seem to be after. Scientific knowledge is appreciated in 'shells', for a very good reason. It's hard enough to deal with it when it's split into levels. Why do you think it would be easier to condense the levels all together.
 
  • #58
In the light of the comment by Elmorshedy, below, I wonder how you now feel about things.

Yes Sophie , I see that he wants to dwell into electrons.I think this is not only the fault of some teacher/s or the electron model , I think this is just the thing we all kinda had in our childhood when we wanted to max out on everything we could get our hands on , the feel that you need to understand everything with one blink of an eye.
I assume from the OP's language he is still pretty young , in his teens probably , so that would explain this tendency, those who really feel fanatic and willing to learn catch later on , I mean the truth is out there , those who truly seek will find it anyway , but better if they listen to the advice they are given.
 
  • #59
Crazymechanic said:
Yes Sophie , I see that he wants to dwell into electrons.I think this is not only the fault of some teacher/s or the electron model , I think this is just the thing we all kinda had in our childhood when we wanted to max out on everything we could get our hands on , the feel that you need to understand everything with one blink of an eye.
I assume from the OP's language he is still pretty young , in his teens probably , so that would explain this tendency, those who really feel fanatic and willing to learn catch later on , I mean the truth is out there , those who truly seek will find it anyway , but better if they listen to the advice they are given.
All experts were beginners one day :smile:
 
  • #60
ElmorshedyDr said:
All experts were beginners one day :smile:

True. As only a mild sort of expert I can say that we were not taught 'the electron way' because our teachers were too sensible to let us think that 'electrons' were understandable enough to be the 'explanation' for anything we were likely to come across until University.
That approach has proved extremely useful in later life because I have never risked using a trivial model when trying to grasp difficult things.

[edit: This is especially true if one demands a non-mathematical, "Physical" explanation.]
 
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  • #61
How about this: A river flows from the mountains to the sea. Why? because the river elevation is higher in the mountains, and water flows downhill. Now along the river there is an island, which splits the river into two streams for awhile, before they rejoin at the downstream end of the island. If you dig a ditch across the island, will water flow in the ditch? It might, but only if one end of the ditch is lower than the other end - because water flows downhill.

In your circuit, where you add the wire, the "elevation" (or potential) is the same at both ends, there is no current because the wire doesn't lead downhill.

I'm almost afraid to post this, I hope it doesn't stir up more confusion.
 
  • #62
I don't like the river analogy. The motion of a fluid is astronomically more complicated than a couple of Kirchoff laws. If people don't have a conceptual understanding of electricity then they should buy a battery a voltmeter and a load of cables to see how it works
 
  • #63
mikeph said:
I don't like the river analogy. The motion of a fluid is astronomically more complicated than a couple of Kirchoff laws. If people don't have a conceptual understanding of electricity then they should buy a battery a voltmeter and a load of cables to see how it works

I'm inclined to agree with you. Water, in so many ways, is a rubbish model for electricity and leads got all sorts of misconceptions. (I know: "Change the record" - but it's true.)
 
  • #64
For a easy explanation, i wish you can understand :smile:
When there is a temperature difference between two bodies then the heat will flow from higher heated body to lower heated body.
If the temperature of both bodies are same(there is no temperature difference)
Then the heat will not flow.
Is it helps ?
 
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