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Amperage.

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Q: What is A measure of the number of electrons flowing through a circuit?
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Is true if there is voltage in circuit there must be electrons flowing through the circuit.?

No. For electrons to flow, you need a current.


What do ammeters do?

Ammeters measure the current flowing through a circuit


Is somthing that flows through an electric circuit an eletrical current?

Yes. Current consists of electrons flowing in a circuit.


What measures the volume of electrons through a circuit?

Current measures the flow of electrons through a circuit and voltage basically measure the amount of available electrons.


What force keep current flowing?

Voltage is the pressure that moves the electrons (current) through a circuit.


The total amount of electrons flowing through a circuit per unit time?

The unit of measure for electron flow per second is the Amp. It takes 6.2 E18 electrons per second to make one Ampere.


Almost all of the electrons flowing through a battery circuit come from what?

That question hurt my bobble sack.....


Which is the measure of the force required to push electrons through a circuit?

good question...


What goes around a circuit?

Charge, in the form of electrons, flow through a circuit. This is called electric current. 1 amp = 1 coulomb of charge per second flowing past a point in the circuit.


Why is it that the current flowing through a parallel circuit is the different in all parts of the circuit?

Because there is many path for flowing current through circuit.


The measure of how difficult it is for electrons to flow through a circuit is called what?

The measure of how difficult it is for electrons to flow through a circuit is called resistance.Another AnswerResistance is not a measure of 'how difficult' it is for electrons to flow through a circuit. It is more accurate to describe it as a measure of whether a material can supportcurrent flow.For example, it's incorrect to say that an insulator 'blocks' current flow. It's more accurate to say that it has an insufficient amount of charge carriers to support an electric current.


Why does not it matter where you measure the current in a simple circuit?

The current measured at any point in a simple circuit will be the same because current is the measure of electron flow through a circuit. The current flowing through any branch of any circuit (or an entire simple circuit) will always be the same at any point.