In a series circuit, the same current flows through each component regardless of their values. As more bulbs are added to a series circuit, the light from each bulb becomes dimmer because more power is required. If one bulb burns out or is removed from the series circuit, all other bulbs will turn off because the circuit is interrupted. In a parallel circuit, the brightness of each bulb remains the same when additional bulbs are added since each bulb has an independent connection to the power source and voltage remains consistent across components. If one bulb burns out in a parallel circuit, the other bulbs will remain lit because the electric current can flow through alternate paths.
In a series circuit, the same current flows through each component regardless of their values. As more bulbs are added to a series circuit, the light from each bulb becomes dimmer because more power is required. If one bulb burns out or is removed from the series circuit, all other bulbs will turn off because the circuit is interrupted. In a parallel circuit, the brightness of each bulb remains the same when additional bulbs are added since each bulb has an independent connection to the power source and voltage remains consistent across components. If one bulb burns out in a parallel circuit, the other bulbs will remain lit because the electric current can flow through alternate paths.
In a series circuit, the same current flows through each component regardless of their values. As more bulbs are added to a series circuit, the light from each bulb becomes dimmer because more power is required. If one bulb burns out or is removed from the series circuit, all other bulbs will turn off because the circuit is interrupted. In a parallel circuit, the brightness of each bulb remains the same when additional bulbs are added since each bulb has an independent connection to the power source and voltage remains consistent across components. If one bulb burns out in a parallel circuit, the other bulbs will remain lit because the electric current can flow through alternate paths.
In a series circuit, the same current flows through each component regardless of their values. As more bulbs are added to a series circuit, the light from each bulb becomes dimmer because more power is required. If one bulb burns out or is removed from the series circuit, all other bulbs will turn off because the circuit is interrupted. In a parallel circuit, the brightness of each bulb remains the same when additional bulbs are added since each bulb has an independent connection to the power source and voltage remains consistent across components. If one bulb burns out in a parallel circuit, the other bulbs will remain lit because the electric current can flow through alternate paths.
current is the same through each component in the circuit regardless of what components are used or their values.
1.
As you add more bulbs to the circuit, the
light the other bulb emits is lesser. More bulb means more power needed, making the lightness of it lesser or dimmer. 2.
Unscrewing one part, connection, or
wire of a bulb results to not working of the circuit. When one bulb is broken, the other bulbs do not glow too.
3.
Adding more bulbs mean
more power or electricity should be on the series or parallel circuit.
4. The first image is
parallel since the connection of the circuit takes many paths and is bulbs are connected to the source independently. The brightness of each bulb is unchanged as more bulb is added to the circuit since each element has the same potential to the source. In other term, they are on the same voltage.
5.
When one part of the
bulb or circuit is unscrewed, then the other will still work. This is due to the fact that electric path can go on different alternative ways since it has more path, and it is parallel circuit. 6.