- Dec 9, 2000
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Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: element
you spent 2 years in EE and don't know the answer to your question? I hate to say this but that's sad
Well, relative to the ground, the battery's positive end is at 1.5 V, no?
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
yeah, if you actually connected it to the battery
Originally posted by: Heisenberg
Having a potential difference between two points has nothing to do with completing a circuit. The electric potential comes from the sole fact that an electric field is a conservative vector field, and so can be described by a scalar potential.
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
yeah, if you actually connected it to the battery
right... so i'm just saying there is no current flowing either way
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
yeah, if you actually connected it to the battery
right... so i'm just saying there is no current flowing either way
Yeah, I know, but the whole "needing to complete a circuit to have a potential thing" isn't right so I wanted to clear up any misconceptions.Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Originally posted by: Heisenberg
Having a potential difference between two points has nothing to do with completing a circuit. The electric potential comes from the sole fact that an electric field is a conservative vector field, and so can be described by a scalar potential.
That's the (slightly) more complicated explanation, but if he's asking this question to start with, I don't think this is the explanation he's looking for.
Originally posted by: element
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
yeah, if you actually connected it to the battery
right... so i'm just saying there is no current flowing either way
there doesn't have to be current flowing for there to be a potential difference, that's why it's called a POTENTIAL difference. It has potential for current flow, not currently doing so (no pun intended)
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
i don't see where you're going with this...
The voltmeter does not complete a circuit with the battery, it's supposed to be infinitely resistive.
yeah, if you actually connected it to the battery
right... so i'm just saying there is no current flowing either way
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
well for one thing you can't read AC and DC at the same time... among lots of other things
Originally posted by: Stealth1024
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
well for one thing you can't read AC and DC at the same time... among lots of other things
the neutral in a wall socket is not AC or DC this has nothing to do with it...
Originally posted by: JohnCU
I love ATOT. "You've been in EE and don't know this?" and half of you have given me the wrong answer.:thumbsup:
Originally posted by: element
Originally posted by: Stealth1024
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
well for one thing you can't read AC and DC at the same time... among lots of other things
the neutral in a wall socket is not AC or DC this has nothing to do with it...
it most certainly is AC when current is flowing through it
Originally posted by: Stealth1024
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
well for one thing you can't read AC and DC at the same time... among lots of other things
the neutral in a wall socket is not AC or DC this has nothing to do with it...
Originally posted by: element
Originally posted by: JohnCU
I love ATOT. "You've been in EE and don't know this?" and half of you have given me the wrong answer.:thumbsup:
yeah but those people spouting off wrong answers haven't been in EE for 2 years I'll bet.
Originally posted by: JohnCU
Originally posted by: element
Originally posted by: JohnCU
I love ATOT. "You've been in EE and don't know this?" and half of you have given me the wrong answer.:thumbsup:
yeah but those people spouting off wrong answers haven't been in EE for 2 years I'll bet.
Yes, and I'm just now finishing my second circuits class. 2 circuits classes doesn't exactly provide me with all the answers.
Originally posted by: Eli
Oh boy .................
Well, no.. because you are not completing the circuit. With 40+ posts, I'd hope that at least has already been covered..
Look at it this way, the electrons are trying to get back to the battery.
If you have a wire connected to the + side.. the electrons are going to start marching through the wire... they'll encounter your voltmeter... continue through it, and into the neutral wall wire.
Now, where are they going to go? Keep marching off into oblivion, traversing millions of miles of copper wire? Back to the power station?
In reality, they never started marching in the first place, since there was no circuit. But you get the idea.
Originally posted by: element
it most certainly is AC when current is flowing through it