Rinnn62 said:
How did Jim know sophiecentaur?
I know him from reading his posts here. I've never met him. He's in England I think and I'm in central USA.
Closest I ever got to crossing the Atlantic was a trip to Bimini in my little sailboat... that storm set meteorological records but that's another story.
Pay attention to his posts and digest them. You'll learn rigorous thinking.Miles Young's post #11 is another good one.
So to supply the power you don't think about one single electron but all of them?
well, yes because it takes so many of them to carry measurable current.
From Miles's post:
The current is, for a steady flow, the net amount of charge that passes through this surface per some period of time. In general, the current is the rate at which charge passes through the surface and it's approximately the same value regardless of where, along the conductor, you imagine the surface to be.
To determine the current, you don't care what electron goes where. You just care about the rate at which charge passes through the surface.
Note he said
charge passing through the surface, not electrons.
Whatever
charge is, each electron carries a small amount of it.
Write a 6 followed by 18 zeroes. (or 602 followed by sixteen zeroes, to be more accurate)
That many electrons carry an amount of charge that's named a "Coulomb"
A coulomb per second,
which would be 6E18 individual electron charges,
passing through Miles's surface every second, is one ampere.It is important to get that concept:
Charge moving past a point is the measure of current.
Place your fingertip against a piece of wire.
Now imagine yourself counting charges going by your fingertip so fast you could reach 6E18 in a second.
That's an amp.
I use that mental exaggeration when explaining to newbies.
So get the concept down pat : charge is coulombs, and current is coulombs per second going past a point.
6E18 is a handy number to remember. My memory aid is "it rhymes with six times three is eighteen"
It'll help you immensely in your study of electricity.Miles was doing great - I hope I haven't just muddied the water.
old jim