- #1
Tinne
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Homework Statement
This is not a real existing homework problem but I do have two questions.
Q.1. In a circuit with a battery of 12 V, one always draws a scheme in which 0 V is written next to the negative terminal. Now, consider only a low resistance (and assume no short circuit will occur), is the potential at the negative terminal of the source near to 12 V (because of the low resistance) or is it always near to 0 V because the electrons lose/use their energy anyway, independing of the resistance they experience.
Q.2. The temperature of electrons is often written in electron volts (eV). The temperature, does it depend both on the thermal velocity and the drift velocity? So a cold electron (at room temp) can have a lot of energy if it is accelerated (or does the thermal energy increases as well then) and a slowly drifting electron with a high temperature also has a high "electron temperature"?
Homework Equations
thermal velocity: sqrt(3kT/m)
drift velocity: sqrt(2qV/m)
with V the potential difference.
The Attempt at a Solution
Hours of search to a simple explanation but nothing found so far.