Electricity Online
Directions for Online Textbook:
- Enter user name and password
- Click “Go to Interactive Online Edition”
- Ch. 17: Introduction to Electricity
- Click on the “eactivities” orange tab at top of page
- Click on “Introduction to electricity” under Virtual Investigation
Stage 1
- In the circuit you created, the bulbs were connected in a series. What happened as you added more bulbs to the circuit?
______
______
______
- What happens when a light bulb is removed from a series circuit? Why?
______
______
Stage 2
- Why did removing a bulb from the parallel circuit cause the other bulbs to NOT go out?
______
______
______
- Based on what you have observed, which type of circuit do you recommend we use for party lights? Why?
______
______
Directions:
- Close out of the Virtual Investigation
- Section 4: Electrical Circuits
- Click on “Electric Circuits”
Electric Currents
- A circuit is a ______path of an electric current.
- When a ______, ______loop if formed, current can pass through the circuit.
- When the electrons flow through the ______, the light bulb lights.
- What are the three parts to the circuit?
- ______
- ______
- ______
Resistors in Series
- A ______circuit is a circuit in which ______the components are connected to each other ______,
- There is only ______path through which current can flow.
- If one of these ______blows out, the circuit is ______.
Resistors in Parallel
- A ______circuit is a circuit in which all the components are connected to each other ______.
- In a parallel circuit, there are ______paths along which current can flow.
- Because the circuit path can go ______or ______any individual resistor, these circuits are ______when one resistor blows out.
Phet Website
Circuit Construction Kit (DC only) - Download
Find a way to make a single light bulb light up with as FEW parts hooked up as possible. When electricity flows through wires and makes something work, like a light bulb, it is called a circuit.
- Sketch your circuit below:
- What seems to be making the light bulb turn on in your circuit? (What do you think electricity is based on the simulator?)
Make a gap in your circuit.
Go to the grab bag and play with the different objects. Find out which objects allow electricity to flow and fill in the data table:
Objects that allow electricity to flow (conductors) / Objects that do NOT allow electricity to flow (insulators)- What do the conductors have in common?
- What do the insulators have in common?
For the next few activities, you need to light up more than 1 bulb at the same time, using just one battery.
First circuit: find a way to hook up your bulbs in a way that if you break the connection at one bulb, ALL bulbs go out.
- Sketch your new circuit:
- Why did the rest of the bulbs go out if you break the connection at one bulb?
- This circuit is called a series circuit because the bulbs are hooked up in one long “series” or line. Name somewhere you have seen a string of lights that are also a series circuit.
Second circuit: find a way to hook up your bulbs in a way that if you break the connection at one bulb, ONLY that bulb goes out.
- Sketch this circuit:
- Why do the rest of the bulbs stay lit if you break the connection at one bulb?
Experiment with the simulator; see what you can make it do!!!
- What did you do to make light bulbs glow brighter?
- What did you do to make light bulbs glow dimmer?
- How can you cause a fire? (In the simulator… NOT in the real world!)
- Can you catch the puppy on fire?