Electric Current: All Types Explained

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Electric current is defined as the flow of electric charge, which can occur through various mediums. All options presented—negative ions in a liquid, electrons in a vacuum, positive ions in a liquid, electrons in a wire, and ions in a vacuum—are considered forms of electric current. The movement of charged particles, whether they are electrons or ions, constitutes an electric current, typically driven by a potential difference. Thus, all the mentioned scenarios qualify as examples of electric current. Understanding this concept is essential for grasping the fundamentals of electricity.
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Which of the following would be considered a current?

a negative ions flowing in a liquid
b electrons moving in a vacuum
c positive ions flowing in a liquid
d electrons moving in a wire
e ions moving in a vacuum

I presume all of these would be electric currents after reading this definition...

Electric current means, depending on the context, a flow of electric charge (a phenomenon) or the rate of flow of electric charge (a quantity).[1] This flowing electric charge is typically carried by moving electrons, in a conductor such as wire; in an electrolyte, it is instead carried by ions, and, in a plasma, by both.[2]

"flow of electric charge"

I believe a-e are all electric charges.

Please help me confirm this... Thank you in advance for any help you can give.
 
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Current is simply movement of charged particles, usually caused by a potential difference (voltage). All of these are examples of current, despite the charge.
 
All of those answers are would be considered currents. Fact.
 
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