Electric current
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
An electric current is a flow of charged particles, such as electrons or ions, moving through an electrical conductor or space. It is how fast electric charge moves through a surface. The moving particles are called charge carriers, and they can be different types depending on the conductor. In electric circuits, the charge carriers are often electrons moving through a wire.
Electric current is measured in ampere, often called an "amp", which is one coulomb per second. This measurement is an important unit in science. We use a tool called an ammeter to measure electric current.
Electric currents create magnetic fields, which help power motors, generators, inductors, and transformers. In regular conductors, electric currents produce heat, which makes incandescent light bulbs glow. Changing electric currents also create electromagnetic waves, which we use in telecommunications to send information across distances.
Symbol
The symbol for electric current is I. This comes from a French phrase meaning "current intensity." A scientist named André-Marie Ampère used this symbol when he studied electric current. The unit of electric current is named after Ampère.
Conventions
We usually think about electric current in a special way called conventional current. This is the direction we imagine positive charges would move. In wires and other things that carry electricity, the tiny parts that move and carry the current are called charge carriers.
In metals, like the wires in our homes, the small parts of atoms called atomic nuclei stay still, while smaller parts called electrons move around and carry the current.
In some other materials, such as semiconductors, the charge carriers can be positive or negative, depending on what they are mixed with. Sometimes, both positive and negative charge carriers can move at the same time, like in special liquids used in batteries called an electrolyte in an electrochemical cell.
No matter if positive or negative charges are moving, it affects the circuit the same way. Because of this, we need a common way to talk about the direction of current. So, we say that negative charge carriers, like electrons, move in the opposite direction to what we call the conventional current direction in a circuit.
Ohm's law
Main article: Ohm's law
Ohm's law shows us how electricity, called current, moves through a wire. It depends on the electric pressure, called voltage, between two points. When voltage is higher, more current flows. We can use a simple rule: current equals voltage divided by resistance. So, if voltage goes up, current goes up. But if resistance goes up, current goes down.
Alternating and direct current
See also: War of the currents
In alternating current (AC), the flow of electric charge changes direction regularly. This is the type of electricity most homes and offices use. The shape of this flow is often a smooth up-and-down pattern.
Direct current (DC) is electricity that flows in just one direction. Things like batteries, solar cells, and some special machines can create direct current. AC can be turned into DC using a device called a rectifier. DC can travel through wires, but also through other materials.
Occurrences
Electric current can be seen in nature, like during lightning, static electric discharge, and the solar wind that creates the polar auroras.
We also create electric current in everyday objects. It flows through metal wires, like those in power lines that bring electrical energy to our homes, and in the tiny wires inside electronic devices. Special currents called eddy currents happen when metals are near changing magnetic fields. In electronics, current can move through things like resistors, inside a battery, and even through the empty space in a vacuum tube. Our bodies also use tiny currents when neurons send signals.
Measurement
Current can be measured using an ammeter. One way to measure electric current is with a galvanometer, but this needs to break the electrical circuit.
There are also ways to measure current without breaking the circuit. These methods detect the magnetic field made by the current. Some devices use different techniques, such as shunt resistors, Hall effect sensors, transformers, magnetoresistive sensors, Rogowski coils, and current clamps.
Resistive heating
Main article: Joule heating
Resistive heating happens when electricity flows through a material and makes it warmer. This is because the moving electric current adds energy to the material, turning it into heat.
A scientist named James Prescott Joule studied this effect in 1841. He placed a wire in water and watched how much the water warmed up when electricity passed through the wire. He found that the heat created depends on the strength of the electric current and the material's resistance to the flow of electricity.
Electromagnetism
Main article: Electromagnetism
Electromagnet
Main article: Electromagnet
When electricity flows through a coil of wires, it can act like a magnet. But when the electricity stops, the coil stops being a magnet. Electricity makes an invisible magnetic field around the wire while it is flowing.
Electromagnetic induction
Main article: Electromagnetic induction
Magnetic fields can make electricity. If you change a magnetic field near a wire, it can make electricity flow in that wire.
Radio waves
Main article: Radio waves
Further information: Radio-frequency current
When electricity flows in a special shape very fast, it can make radio waves. These waves travel at the same speed as light and can make electricity flow in wires far away.
Conduction mechanisms in various media
Main articles: Electrical conductivity and Charge transport mechanisms
In metals, electric current flows because of tiny particles called electrons moving from one place to another. In other materials, charged particles like ions can also create electric current. Scientists use a special idea called "conventional current" to describe the direction of current. This direction is the same as if positive charges were moving, even though in metals the actual particles moving are electrons, which are negative.
In a vacuum, beams of ions or electrons can form currents. In some materials, both positive and negative particles move at the same time to create current. For example, in electrolytes like saltwater, both positive and negative ions move to make up the current. In ice and certain solids, the current is made only of moving ions.
Metals
In metals, some electrons are free to move around easily. When a metal is connected to a battery or another source of electricity, these free electrons move toward the positive end, creating an electric current. This movement happens very fast, and the number of moving electrons shows how strong the current is.
Electrolytes
Main article: Conductivity (electrolytic)
In liquids that conduct electricity, called electrolytes, the current is made of charged particles called ions. For example, in a solution with sodium and chloride ions, the sodium ions move toward the negative end, and the chloride ions move toward the positive end when electricity is applied.
Gases and plasmas
In ordinary air and gases, electricity usually doesn’t flow well. But if the electricity is strong enough, it can cause the gas to break apart into a mix of free electrons and ions, creating a plasma. This plasma can conduct electricity and create sparks or lightning.
Vacuum
In a perfect vacuum with no particles, electricity usually doesn’t flow. But if metal surfaces are heated or have a strong electric field, they can release electrons into the vacuum, allowing electricity to flow.
Superconductivity
Main article: Superconductivity
Some materials can conduct electricity with no resistance at all when they are cooled below a certain temperature. This is called superconductivity. It was first discovered in 1911. In these materials, magnetic fields are pushed out, which is different from normal conductors.
Semiconductor
Main article: Semiconductor
In semiconductors, electricity can flow, but not as easily as in metals. Sometimes, it’s helpful to think of the current as moving positive particles called “holes.” These materials have just the right amount of ability to let electricity flow, more than insulators but less than metals.
Current density and Ohm's law
Main article: Current density
Current density tells us how much electric charge moves through an area in a certain time. It is measured in units called amperes per square meter.
In many metals, when the electric current changes slowly, Ohm's law helps us understand how electricity behaves. Ohm's law says that the amount of current depends on the voltage between two points. This also depends on the material's resistance, which measures how much it opposes the flow of electricity. For alternating currents, the current may stay closer to the surface of the wire.
Speed
Drift speed
Main article: Drift speed
In metals, tiny particles called charged particles move in many directions at once, like gas. To make electric current, these particles need to move together with an average speed called drift speed. In most metals, electrons carry the charge. They move opposite to the electric field, but their drift speed is usually very slow. For example, in a copper wire with normal electric current, electrons move only about a millimeter each second.
Wavefront speed
Main article: Speed of electricity
When electric current changes, it makes waves of energy that travel outside the wire at a very high speed. This speed is a large part of the speed of light and is much faster than the drift speed of the electrons inside the wire. In power lines, these energy waves travel through the space between the wires from the source to where the electricity is used, even though the electrons in the wires themselves only move back and forth a tiny amount.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Electric current, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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