Understanding Charge Flow in RC Circuits: A Scientist's Perspective

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sumit_1
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Member advised to use the formatting template for all homework help requests; Thread moved to Introductory Physics Homework from Advanced Physics Homework.
I have a RC circuit which also includes a battery, the capacitor has some charge initially before we put all the components in the circuit. Now as I connect all of them then charge will start to flow, but wheather this charge will be the sum of initial charge on the capacitor and the new charge produced by the battery or it will be just the new charge produced by the battery?

According to me the charge flowing in the circuit should be the sum of the initial charge of the capacitor and the charge produced by the battery.
Is this correct?
 
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scottdave said:
Look at how much charge (and polarity) will be on the capacitor after a long time. How does this compare with the charge and polarity before they're connected?
I connected the positive side of capacitor to the positive terminal of the battery.
 
scottdave said:
Do you know how much initial charge is on the capacitor?
I know the initial charge on the capacitor.
 
scottdave said:
Maybe think of it as adding money to your bank account. If you started with $10 and end with $50, how much money was added?
$40 is added. But i want to know how much amount of charge will flow in the circuit as i have described in the problem?