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Electric current | Physics | Khan Academy

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    - [Lecturer] Electricity that lights up
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    above looks very different
    than lightning strikes,
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    but they're actually more
    similar than one might think
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    because they both have electric current.
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    So let's understand what
    electric current is,
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    how they're produced,
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    and also get to understand a
    little bit about lightning.
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    So what exactly is electric current?
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    Well think of electric current
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    as a flow of net charge
    through any given area.
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    Here's what I mean by flow of net charge.
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    Well imagine you have a
    tiny cross-sectional area
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    through which you have equal amount
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    of positive charges flowing
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    to the right and left in any given time.
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    Now notice there is a flow,
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    but there is no net flow (chuckles)
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    and therefore here we say
    there is zero current.
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    Another interesting example is
    what if you have equal amount
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    of positive and negative charges flowing
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    in the same direction in
    the same time, let's say
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    through again, a given
    cross-sectional area.
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    Again, notice there is a flow of charges,
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    but the total flow over here, total charge
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    that's flowing is zero. (chuckles)
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    So net charge is still zero
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    and therefore there is no
    electric current over here.
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    Okay, what about now? Ooh, now
    we do have electric current.
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    Now we have a net positive
    charge flowing to the right.
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    Over here there is an electric current.
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    Now we do have a net negative
    charges flowing to the right.
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    We do have an electric current. Okay?
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    So it's a flow of net charge,
    but how do you measure it?
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    Well, we measure it as the
    amount of charges flowing
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    through any given
    cross-sectional area per second.
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    So you can think of it
    as coulomb per second.
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    How many coulombs are flowing per second?
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    And the coulombs per
    second is also called,
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    it's also called Amperes,
    okay? Capital A, Amperes.
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    And just to give you typical numbers,
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    your air conditioners heaters,
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    they drop out 10 to 15 Amperes of current.
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    Your ceiling fan tube lights,
    television sets less than
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    that, about one or two amps.
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    And your smaller circuits
    like you know the toy circuits
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    and stuff, they would be even lesser.
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    It would be fraction of Amperes.
    But what about lightning?
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    Ooh. (chuckles)
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    Lightning can have tens of
    thousands of Amperes in them.
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    Okay, how do we set up
    an electric current?
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    How do we get an electric current?
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    Well, for an electric
    current we need a voltage.
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    Just like how, if you need
    to make a ball roll, you need
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    to have a height difference,
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    which produces a gravitational
    potential difference
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    across the end of say a plank.
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    Similarly, if you need to set
    up a current through a wire,
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    you need to have an electric
    potential difference
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    across the ends of it.
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    When you have an electric
    potential difference,
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    you can get a current, but
    you also need to make sure
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    that there are some charges.
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    There are charges that are
    free to move in your material.
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    Not all materials have that,
    for example, glass or plastic.
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    Well, they don't have free charges because
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    if you look inside them,
    well you can model them
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    and say that you know what?
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    The electrons inside these
    atoms are very tightly bound.
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    So there are no free electrons to move.
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    There are no charges to move.
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    So if you put a voltage
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    across them, you'll probably
    get no current over here.
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    We call such material insulators, glass,
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    wood, plastic, these are
    examples of insulators.
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    On the other hand, if you take metals
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    of which wires are made
    of, then you'll find
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    that the outermost electrons
    are not tightly bound.
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    As a result, they are free
    to move around the material.
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    We call them free electrons.
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    And since you have free charges available
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    for motion, we call these
    materials conductors
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    because if you put a voltage across them,
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    well these electrons can move
    and contribute to current.
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    So you need a voltage
    across a conducting medium
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    for electric current.
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    Okay, but how do you get a
    voltage in the first place?
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    Well, in small circuits,
    you probably already know,
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    voltage is given by a battery.
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    One end of the battery
    is at a higher potential,
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    another end of the battery
    is at lower potential.
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    And when you connect it
    to a circuit, it provides
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    the potential difference.
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    But in larger circuits for
    like for example, the circuits
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    in our houses, well the
    potential difference is provided
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    by large electric generators
    in our power stations.
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    And by the way, while drawing
    a battery in our circuit,
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    well we use a circuit
    symbol that looks like this.
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    The longer line represents
    the positive terminal
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    and the shorter thick line
    represents a negative terminal.
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    So that if you just draw
    this, we don't have to draw
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    like a big battery over here.
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    Anyways, even though we have a battery
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    in this circuit right now,
    we don't have a current,
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    we don't have a potential
    difference across this bulb.
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    Why?
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    Well, you can see over here, that's
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    because the circuit is not closed.
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    We say because there
    is some air in between.
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    Air is an excellent insulator and
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    therefore there's not going
    to be any current over here.
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    In order for there to
    be a current, we need
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    to close the circuit, meaning
    we need to connect this gap
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    and that's where the switch
    is, this is a switch.
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    So if I close the switch
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    like this, now the circuit is complete.
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    Now there'll be a potential
    difference across the ends
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    of the ball when now there'll
    be a current over here.
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    I'm gonna open the switch.
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    There is no electric current,
    the circuit is broken.
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    Close the switch, there's going
    to be an electric current.
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    Now because I compared charges moving
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    through a ball rolling
    down, we might model it
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    by thinking that hey,
    when there is no voltage,
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    all the charges are at
    rest, say the electrons
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    over here are at rest and when
    I do complete the circuit,
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    the electrons are now nicely moving.
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    But that's not a very accurate
    way to think about it,
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    that's not a good model.
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    Instead, a better model
    is if you were to peek
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    inside the wire, we
    find that the electrons
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    are randomly moving, bumping
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    into stuff because they have a lot
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    of energy even when there is no voltage.
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    So they're not at rest, they're
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    in fact moving at very high speeds.
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    But what happens when we close the switch?
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    When we close the circuit, look,
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    there is a potential difference
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    and therefore there is an
    electric field setup in the wire
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    that electric field starts
    pushing on the electrons.
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    And look, you can now see the electrons
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    are slowly drifting to the left.
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    It's that drifting motion
    that constitutes the current
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    and what causes them to drift to the left?
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    Again, there are some analogies which says
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    that electrons push on each
    other making them drift.
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    But that's again not very accurate.
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    A better way to think about it is
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    that the battery produces
    the electric field.
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    There's an electric field
    set up inside the wire.
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    It's that electric field that is causing,
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    that's pushing the
    electrons, making them drift
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    to the left over here.
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    But wait a second, why did I show
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    that the electrons are
    drifting to the left over here?
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    Let's think about it.
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    So one way to think
    about it's, you could say
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    that hey, electrons are being attracted
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    by the positive terminal of
    the battery being repelled
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    by the negative terminal
    of the battery, making
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    the electrons go this way.
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    But a question that could raise is,
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    in the wire that means
    the electrons are going
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    from a lower potential
    to a higher potential
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    like going uphill.
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    How does that make any sense?
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    That was a point of
    confusion for a long time.
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    So let's talk about it a little bit. Okay?
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    If I have a big positive charge
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    and next to it I keep a
    very tiny positive charge
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    and at rest, let's say,
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    and I let go of it, then
    we know it gets repelled
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    and it gains kinetic
    energy in this direction.
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    Now because energy is conserved,
    we could ask where did
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    that kinetic energy come from?
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    We say, ah, there it must have
    come from potential energy.
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    So as it goes from here to here,
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    the system must lose potential energy
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    and therefore we can now say that hey,
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    this point represents
    high potential region.
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    This point represents low potential region
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    and this represents the downhill
    direction for the charges.
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    As you go from here to
    here, it's potential energy
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    starts getting converted
    into kinetic energy.
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    Kind of like what happens
    to this ball rolling down.
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    But what about negative charges?
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    Well, negative charges will
    be exactly the opposite.
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    They will get attracted
    by this positive charge.
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    So they will gain kinetic energy this way.
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    And for negative charges,
    it's the exact opposite
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    as they go from here to
    here, this is a direction
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    in which they are losing potential energy
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    and gaining kinetic energy.
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    So this must be high, this must be low,
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    this should represent the
    direction of the downhill.
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    But now the problem is which
    direction should we say
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    is down for the charges?
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    Well, we could say, hey, for
    positive charge, this is down
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    and say negative charges,
    this is the down,
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    but we decided no, no, no,
    let's just use one of these
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    as our reference and we'll
    just consider one direction
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    as our actual down.
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    So we decided, hey, whatever happens
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    for a positive charge,
    let's use positive charge
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    as our reference,
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    and whichever direction
    positive charge natural tends
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    to go, we'll call that
    direction as our down
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    for charges, right, down in potential.
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    Because of that reference,
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    by definition, positive charges go
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    down the electric potential.
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    Negative charges look end up going
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    up the electric potential, not
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    because they're literally going
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    to a higher potential energy region.
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    No, no, they're also going towards
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    lower potential energy region.
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    It's just a reference because
    our reference point for high
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    and low is chosen, you
    know, from the perspective
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    of a positive charge.
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    Because of that reference,
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    negative charges end up
    going up the potential,
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    they have a natural tendency
    to go up the potential.
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    Does that make sense?
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    And therefore, electrons,
    which are negative charges,
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    have a natural tendency to
    go up the electric potential.
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    Now, the final question we could have is
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    the direction of the current.
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    What is the direction of
    the current over here?
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    Well, we could say, hey,
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    whichever direction the
    charges are drifting, well
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    that itself could be the
    direction of the current.
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    That's the most natural way
    to think about it, right?
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    So electrons are drifting this way.
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    So let's say that that is the current,
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    but again, there's a problem
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    because we have positive
    and negative charges.
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    Remember that example
    where we had both positive
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    and negative charge, equal positive
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    and negative charges flowing
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    through an area giving me zero current
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    because a net charge over here is zero.
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    Well, if I said that, hey, you know,
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    whichever direction charges
    are moving, let's just call
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    that direction as the current,
    then I have a problem.
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    Because I could say that hey,
    positive charges is giving me
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    a current this way, negative charges
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    also giving me a current this way,
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    but I know the total current must be zero.
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    So that doesn't work
    because you know these two,
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    if I add up, I don't get zero,
    I should get a net current
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    to the right, but that's not true.
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    I know that the current should be zero.
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    Again, to solve for that, we
    decided, hey, you know what?
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    Whichever direction, positive
    charges are moving, we'll say
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    that is the direction of the current.
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    And for the negative charges,
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    we'll say the opposite is
    the direction of the current.
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    So we said if the negative
    charges are moving to the right,
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    we will say the direction of
    the current is to the left.
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    And now look, now the
    total current becomes zero
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    because your right and
    left current cancels out.
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    Now it makes sense.
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    So the convention
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    for choosing the direction of the current
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    is whichever direction
    positive charges are going,
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    that is the direction of the current.
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    If you have negative charges, opposite.
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    Whichever direction negative
    charges are going, opposite to
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    that, that will be the
    direction of the current.
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    Okay? (chuckles)
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    Now, because in wires, it's the electrons
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    that are always drifting,
    that's those are the one
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    that constitutes the current
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    and the electrons are
    negatively charged particles.
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    Our convention for the current
    would be not the direction
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    of the electron flow, but
    in the opposite direction
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    of the electron flow,
    it would be this way.
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    So the conventional direction
    of the current, notice, is
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    in the opposite direction
    of the electron flow.
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    And I'll tell you what can be frustrating
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    because in most cases we'll be
    dealing with electron flows.
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    This will be frustrating because
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    in most cases our
    conventional current will be
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    in the opposite direction
    of the actual motion
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    of the charges, actual
    drifting motion of the charges.
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    But it's unfortunate that electrons,
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    which are the major charge carriers
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    in most of the circuits,
    end up being (chuckles)
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    a negatively charged particle.
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    And our positive charges
    are reference for us.
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    And so it might slightly
    feel awkward initially,
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    but you'll get used to
    it, don't worry too much.
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    This now finally brings us to lightning.
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    What exactly is lightning?
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    Well, lightning is also
    an electric current,
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    meaning flow of charges.
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    But how does it happen?
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    And more importantly, lightning is a flow
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    of charges through air,
    but air is an insulator.
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    And we saw that insulators
    do not conduct electricity.
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    So what's going on over here?
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    Well, we'll not give you too much details,
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    but it turns out that clouds
    usually have charges separated.
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    The top of it is usually
    positively charged
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    and the bottom is negatively charged.
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    Now because the bottom is closer
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    to the earth, the negative
    charges push electrons
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    of the earth away from
    it 'cause negative repel.
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    And as the electrons get
    repelled away, the surface
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    of the ground will be
    mostly positively charged.
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    Now during a thunderstorm,
    the charges builds up
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    because the air is an insulator,
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    because there's no corona over here,
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    the charges can build up, and as a result,
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    the potential difference
    become incredibly high.
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    It can reach millions of moist.
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    Now, eventually what happens
    is that the electrons
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    from the atoms of the air
    molecules, like oxygen, nitrogen,
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    and all of those stuff can
    actually get ripped apart.
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    And we'll not get into
    again the details of how
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    that happens, but you can now imagine,
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    if electrons start getting ripped apart.
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    Now we start having charges.
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    Once we have charged particles
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    in between, we have a conducting channel.
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    And once we have that conducting channel,
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    the charges can sort of
    get dumped into the earth.
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    And that's basically
    what we call a lightning.
  • 12:54 - 12:56
    Now this lightning produces a lot of heat.
  • 12:56 - 12:59
    That's one of the reason it
    glows and you can see it.
  • 12:59 - 13:01
    But that heat also causes rapid expansions
  • 13:01 - 13:04
    in the air, making the air vibrate.
  • 13:04 - 13:06
    And these vibrations
    eventually reach our ears
  • 13:06 - 13:11
    after some time, and we
    call that as thunder.
  • 13:11 - 13:15
    So look, lightning is an
    electric current, and guess what?
  • 13:15 - 13:17
    Sparking that happens
    sometimes, those annoying sparks
  • 13:17 - 13:19
    we get whenever we get charged up
  • 13:19 - 13:21
    and we're trying to reach out
    to a doorknob, for example.
  • 13:21 - 13:22
    (laughs)
  • 13:22 - 13:23
    It's very similar to what
    happens in a lightning.
  • 13:23 - 13:26
    It's a miniature version of lightning.
Title:
Electric current | Physics | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
13:29

English subtitles

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