If you ground the flow of current like the last part of your question states you will not have a complete circuit as the circuit will open on a short circuit. To make a complete circuit operate you need a power source, an overload device to protect the conductors of the circuit, conductors to carry the current and a load across the power source which causes the current to flow in the circuit.
Leave any one of these things out and you will not have a complete circuit.
A circuit that is complete and unbroken with flowing electric current normally has steady supply of voltage with no broken links. Electrical energy flows to light up a bulb or do similar work. Its status is complete, nothing else is needed.
Yes, as long as the unbroken path is a good conductor of electricity.
A closed circuit is a kind of electric circuit in which the path that the electrons follow forms a complete circuit.
When a battery is connected to a complete circuit, an electric field is established almost instantly throughout the circuit. This electric field causes free electrons in the conductive material to begin moving, resulting in a flow of electric current. While the individual electrons travel relatively slowly, the effect of the electric field propagates at a significant fraction of the speed of light, allowing the current to appear to flow almost instantaneously. Thus, the response of the circuit is immediate, even though the actual movement of electrons is gradual.
Because a generator extracts energy from whatever is rotating it and passes this (by the electric current it produces) down the circuit to the motor (or light bulb or heater) where it is used. When there is no complete electric circuit, no electricity can flow so no (little) energy is extracted, but when the circuit is closed, electricity does flow and the armature is more difficult to turn.
The complete path for an electric current to follow is called a circuit. It includes a closed loop with a source of electricity, conductive material, and devices that use the electricity.
The complete path of an electric current is described as a closed loop circuit. This means that the current flows from the power source through a continuous path of conductive materials, such as wires and components, and back to the power source. Without a closed loop, the current cannot flow continuously and the circuit will not work.
I guess Electric Circuit....
The complete path that an electric current flows through is called an electric circuit. It includes components like wires, switches, and resistors that allow the flow of electricity in a closed loop.
yes
Inside an electric cell, chemical energy is converted into electrical energy. When the cell is part of a complete electric circuit, the electrical energy is then converted into other forms of energy, such as light, heat, or mechanical work, depending on the components in the circuit.
if an electric circuit has potential difference. Electricity will flow only if an electrical circuit is closed.
Yes, a complete circuit has a closed loop for the electric current to flow. A closed circuit allows the flow of electrons from the negative terminal of the battery to the positive terminal, completing the circuit and powering the devices connected.
The term is "circuit" (from the same root as circle) An electric circuit must be uninterrupted for the current to flow. (This is why circuit-breakers are also called circuit-interruptors.)
A complete, unbroken path that charges can flow through is called an electric circuit.
a power source, path, and load or resistance.
An Electric PathA complete path for an electric current to follow is called a closed circuit. Ampere is the SI unit for measuring an electric current.