
ELECTRIC CIRCUIT1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00Animation of the movement of electrons (the opposite of conventional current) in a simple electric circuit consisting of a battery, a switch, and a light bulb.
ELECTRIC CURRENT is the flow of charge. Conventionally this is the flow of positive charg...PT15Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/4191e084-b505-4b62-b186-90a017575922/Electrical-Circuit-DC-Russell-Kightley-FHD_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/4191e084-b505-4b62-b186-90a017575922/Electrical-Circuit-DC-Russell-Kightley-FHD_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/4191e084-b505-4b62-b186-90a017575922/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/4191e084-b505-4b62-b186-90a017575922/price
3 WAY SWITCH
3 WAY SWITCH: DC THREE WAY SWITCH: animation of the movement of electrons (the opposite of conventional current) in DC three way switch arrangement.
If two 3-way switches are arranged as illustrated then the lights can be turned on or off at either end of the circuit. You come home at night and switch on the hall and stairway light to see your way to bed. Once upstairs you can switch the lights off again from the upper landing. It would be annoying, inconvenient, dangerous and pointless if you had to go down the stairs again to switch the lights off! You'd have to climb the stairs again in the dark!
As you can see, the current will travel through either the upper or the lower of the two wires that connect the two switches. This animation uses a regular single cell to supply current. In a real situation (in a house) it would be AC (alternating current).
If two 3-way switches are arranged as illustrated then the lights can be turned on or off at either end of the circuit. You come home at night and switch on the hall and stairway light to see your way to bed. Once upstairs you can switch the lights off again from the upper landing. It would be annoying, inconvenient, dangerous and pointless if you had to go down the stairs again to switch the lights off! You'd have to climb the stairs again in the dark!
As you can see, the current will travel through either the upper or the lower of the two wires that connect the two switches. This animation uses a regular single cell to supply current. In a real situation (in a house) it would be AC (alternating current).
Animation ID: Electric-circuit-double-switch-FHD-Russell-Kightley
Duration: 0:18
copyright Russell Kightley
Animation resolution: 1920x1080 pixels @ 30.0 fps, ~2.0 Mbits/s
3 WAY SWITCH2020-08-17T08:09:57Z3 WAY SWITCH: DC THREE WAY SWITCH: animation of the movement of electrons (the opposite of conventional current) in DC three way switch arrangement.
If two 3-way switches are arranged as illustrated then the lights can be turned on or off at either ...PT18Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/3dc49731-c2c9-4bcc-b17a-213d65648092/Electric-circuit-double-switch-FHD-Russell-Kightley_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/3dc49731-c2c9-4bcc-b17a-213d65648092/Electric-circuit-double-switch-FHD-Russell-Kightley_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/3dc49731-c2c9-4bcc-b17a-213d65648092/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/3dc49731-c2c9-4bcc-b17a-213d65648092/price

ELECTRIC CIRCUIT series1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00ELECTRIC CIRCUIT series. Components are arranged one after another (in series) along the circuit. The current therefore flows through each element in turn. If one element is removed then the circuit is broken. This animation shows a simple DC electrica...PT11Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/e023bc73-a2c0-4e7f-a498-4593385f037e/Electric-circuit-bulbs-series-FHD-Russell-Kightley_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/e023bc73-a2c0-4e7f-a498-4593385f037e/Electric-circuit-bulbs-series-FHD-Russell-Kightley_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/e023bc73-a2c0-4e7f-a498-4593385f037e/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/physics/-/medias/e023bc73-a2c0-4e7f-a498-4593385f037e/price