Sunday, March 11, 2007

What is electricity?

Electricity powers our lights, heating, electronic appliances such as computers and television, and a host of other essential services that we take for granted. However, electricity has much more important aspects because it is the force that holds together the molecules and atoms of all substances.

The type of electricity that is most familiar to us is electrical current. This is the flow of electrical charges through a substance called a conductor, such as a metal wire. This flow happens because some of the negatively charged electrons circling the nuclei of the conductor's atoms are held loosely. The electrons can move from one atom to the next, producing an electrical current.

Energy can no be created. An electrical generator is simply a means of converting mechanical energy into electrical energy. In its simplest form, a generator spins coils of wire in a magnetic field, causing the flow of electrical current in the conducting wire. The power to spin the generator comes from other forms of energy. This energy might be stored energy in fossil fuels such as coal or oil, hydroelectric power from dams, wind power from turning huge windmills, or nuclear power produced by the radioactive decay of elements. In all these cases, one form of energy is simply converted into electrical energy.

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