even easier than that...
VooDoo said:
Hi guys,
Just a question with a current vs voltage graph (or any graph with voltage on the horizontal axis)...why does voltage sometimes go into the negative section?
it's all relativity [no, not Albert E's kind...]...
the graph or axis you refer to is a representation of voltage
measured with respect to a reference, usually referred to as "ground."
if you put a voltmeter across a flashlight battery, it's going to tell you how much more positive the voltage is on the positive terminal of the voltmeter, as compared to the voltage on the negative terminal of the voltmeter.
in other words, if the positive terminal of the voltage-measuring tool is
more positive than the other (negative) terminal, the voltage will read as positive, you'll be on the "positive side of the graph", and the needle or digits will move "up."
if you reverse the leads to the meter, or reverse the battery, what was read as a "positive voltage" on the meter or the graph will now be indicated as a "negative voltage."
yep, the meter didn't change, and the battery didn't change; the way they were connected to each other did, and the reference point from which the "zero-level" voltage was being measured (typically the "-" terminal of the meter) DID change.
hope that helped a little.
now, in real life, there are many electrical components, particularly things like diodes and transistors, that behave very differently when they have voltage applied to them in what's routinely called the "forward" or "reverse" directions... and that's where the fun (and their usefulness) begins...
