- #36
sophiecentaur
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Bashyboy said:From this discussion, I am getting the impression that the battery, in some way, provides the an electron (or current) with enough energy to make it around the circuit. It's as if the battery knows that there are resistors, and compensates for this by providing more energy than the current (or electron) would need if there were no resistors. Is this correct?
All the battery needs to "know" is how much current is needed to maintain its voltage across its terminals. It hasn't a brain with which to 'know anything' but charges are produced (internally) at its terminals until the current it releases is limited by the PD that exists (externally) at its terminals. How long it takes for that voltage to appear will be determined by the step response of the circuit. This could be a few ns or ten days. This is where the idea of trying to explain the process in 'mechanical' terms becomes pointless.
Kirchoff does not claim to apply at switch-on so why try to reconcile what it says with the switch on situation or to prove him 'wrong', in some way?
There are always resistors in a circuit that Kirchoff II describes. Read it.