Lect. 11, AC, and DC Circuits
Lect. 11, AC, and DC Circuits
Lect. No. 11
“Electric Current, and AC Circuits”
2019-2020
ELECTRIC CURRENT
When charges move in a direction perpendicular to a
surface of area A (The area could be the cross-sectional
area of a wire, for example).
The current is the rate at which charge flows through
this surface.
Suppose Q is the amount of charge that flows through an
area A in a time interval t and that the direction of
flow is perpendicular to the area. Then the average
current Iav is equal to the amount of charge divided by
the time interval:
Current is composed of individual moving charges, so
for an extremely low current, it is conceivable that a
single charge could pass through area A in one instant
and no charge in the next instant. All currents, then, are
essentially averages over time.
The instantaneous current I is the limit of the average
current as the time interval goes to zero:
(a) (b)
Figure 2. A series connection of two resistors, R1 and R2. The currents in the
resistors are the same, and the equivalent resistance of the combination is given
by Req = R1+R2.
Because the potential difference
between a and b equals IR1
and the potential difference between b and c equals IR2, the
potential difference between a and c is