Electricity and Magnetism Study Guide

6th Grade Science

●This is diagram an example of a series circuit.

○Any break, or opening, in a series circuit causes the current to stop flowing through the entire circuit.

○A series circuit is an electric circuit that has only one path through which an electric current can flow.

●This diagram is an example of a parallel circuit.

○A parallel circuit is an electric circuit that has multiple paths that an electric current can flow through.

○If you turn off one light in a parallel circuit, the other lights will remain lit.

○Houses use parallel circuits for their electrical needs.

Be able the following diagrams.

Opposites attract

(arrows toward each magnet)

Like repel

(arrows point away from magnets)

electric current - The movement of electrically charged particles, such as electrons.

●electromagnet - A temporary magnet made with a current-carrying wire coil wrapped around a magnetic core.

●magnetic force - A push or pull a magnetic field applies to either a magnetic material or an electric current.

magnetic material - Any material that a magnet attracts.

●magnet - An object that attracts iron and other materials that have magnetic qualities similar to iron.

●magnetic domain - A region in a magnetic material in which the magnetic fields of all of the atoms point in the same direction.

electric discharge - The loss of an unbalanced electric charge.

●voltage - The amount of energy used to move one coulomb of electrons through the circuit.

electric resistance - The measure of how difficult it is for an electric current to flow in a material.

●generator - Machines that transform mechanical energy to electric energy.

●coulomb - the unit of measurement for an amount of electrons

●amps - the term for electrical circuits that is comparable to frequency for waves

alternating current - the electric current produced by generators and constantly reverses direction

●direct current - an electric current that is produced by a battery and always flows in one direction

●electric field -the invisible region around any charged object

❖Basic parts of a circuit - lightbulb/resistor, battery/electric source, wires

❖When you rub a balloon against a wool sweater, the electrons transfer from the sweater to the balloon

❖When two objects touch, the object that holds electrons more tightly becomes negatively charged.

❖Objects become electrically charged when electrons move from one object to another.

❖A positively charged object must gain electrons in order to become electrically neutral.

❖A particle that has equal amounts of positive charge and negative charge is considered electrically neutral.