FS98 said:
If we measure the voltage in a simple series circuit to be 5v and the resistance to be 10 ohms. The current given is .5A. Is this the amount of chage traveling from the first point to the second point per unit time, or is it the amount of charge flowing through a cross section of the conductor between those two points?
Okay, so, it is the total charge flowing through a boundary per unit time. It doesn't matter how big or small the area is. And, there is no real thing as a point. You're basically confusing math with engineering.
"First point to a second point" is an abstract mathematical concept that doesn't exist.
All wires have a cross section larger that a line. It doesn't matter how big the cross section is in measuring current. Current isn't in units of area.
Current density is in Coulomb's per second per meter squared (C/m*s). Current density is across an abstract boundary of zero area.
What is current in a stream? Is it between two points of the stream or through a cross section? It is liters per second. It doesn't matter how deep or wide the stream is. Current doesn't account for the width of the stream, only the total volume per unit time.
The language in physics is very strict. If you say "cross section", you are including area. If you say, "through a point", you are talking about current density, not current.
Current is Joules per second. That is over whatever size cross-section that the physical wire is. There are no units of area
Current density is in Joules/(s*m^2). It is dependent in how thick the wire is. It is a theoretical measure that can only be calculated. It is "in the limit" as diameter goes to zero.
In circuit analysis, the wire is taken as infinitely thin. Wire diameter only comes in when actually specifying what wire size the purchasing agent should buy. Then, the wire rating becomes important. For the identical current, a thin wire will melt. Bit that also depends on the type of material.
So, you got to get that "current" has nothing to do with physical dimensions. It is through whatever cross section size you mean, from a theoretical point to the width of a lightning bolt.