- #1
Femme_physics
Gold Member
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Circuit can supply "negative voltages"?
I read an article trying to understand voltage dividers better.
I then read this quote that threw me off!
Now, what does it mean that a circuit is designed to supply both positive and negative voltages? I'm pretty new to electricity. All I need is that a difference in potentials (i.e. voltage difference) means current flow. That would be conventionally from plus to minus (although electrons are considered to carry a negative charge). For all I know, that is the only possible type of motion. Negative electrons flowing (conventionally) from positive to negative.
Can anyone help clear this out?
The article's link:
http://www.tpub.com/neets/book1/chapter3/1-35.htm
I read an article trying to understand voltage dividers better.
I then read this quote that threw me off!
As you know, some circuits are designed to supply both positive and negative voltages. Perhaps now you wonder if a negative voltage has any less potential than a positive voltage. The answer is that 100 volts is 100 volts. Whether it is negative or positive does not affect the feeling you get when you are shocked.
Now, what does it mean that a circuit is designed to supply both positive and negative voltages? I'm pretty new to electricity. All I need is that a difference in potentials (i.e. voltage difference) means current flow. That would be conventionally from plus to minus (although electrons are considered to carry a negative charge). For all I know, that is the only possible type of motion. Negative electrons flowing (conventionally) from positive to negative.
Can anyone help clear this out?
The article's link:
http://www.tpub.com/neets/book1/chapter3/1-35.htm