What Is Electricity?
Electricity is a form of energy that starts with atoms.
Atoms are too small to see, but they make up everything around us. An
atom has three tiny parts: protons,
neutrons,
and electrons.
The center of the atom has at least one proton and one neutron. At least
one electron travels around the center of the atom at great speed.
Electricity can be created by forcing electrons to flow from atom to
atom.
How Electricity Is Generated
Most electricity used in the United States is produced at power
plants. Various energy sources are used to turn turbines.
The spinning turbine shafts turn electromagnets that are surrounded
by heavy coils of copper wire inside generators. This creates a magnetic
field, which causes the electrons in the copper wire to move from atom
to atom.
How Electricity Travels
Electricity leaves the power plant and is sent over high-power transmission
lines on tall towers. The very strong electric current
from a power plant must travel long distances to get where it is needed.
Electricity loses some of its strength (voltage)
as it travels, so it must be helped along by transformers,
which boost or step up its power.
When electricity gets closer to where it will be used, its voltage
must be decreased. Different kinds of transformers at utility substations
do this job, stepping down electricitys power. Electricity
then travels on overhead or underground distribution
wires to neighborhoods. When the distribution wires
reach a home or business, another transformer reduces the electricity
down to just the right voltage to be used in appliances, lights, and
other things that run on electricity.
A cable carries the electricity from the distribution wires to the
house through a meter box. The meter measures how much electricity the
people in the house use. From the meter box, wires run through the walls
to outlets and lights. The electricity is always waiting in the wires
to be used.
Electricity travels in a circuit.
When you switch on an appliance, you complete the circuit. Electricity
flows along power lines to the outlet, through the power cord into the
appliance, then back through the cord to the outlet and out to the power
lines again.
Electricity travels fast (186,000 miles per second). If you traveled
that fast, you could travel around the world eight times in the time
it takes to turn on a light! And if you had a lamp on the moon wired
to a switch in your bedroom, it would take only 1.26 seconds after you
flipped the switch for electricity to light the lamp 238,857 miles away!
How Electricity Is Measured
Volts,
amps,
and watts
measure electricity. Volts measure the pressure under which
electricity flows. Amps measure the amount of electric current. Watts
measure the amount of work done by a certain amount of current at a
certain pressure or voltage.
To understand how they are related, think of water in a hose. Turning
on the faucet supplies the force, which is like the voltage. The amount
of water moving through the hose is like the amperage. You would use
lots of water that comes out really hard (like a lot of watts) to wash
off a muddy car. You would use less water that comes out more slowly
(like less watts) to fill a glass.
1 watt = 1 amp multiplied by 1 volt
1 amp = 1 watt divided by 1 volt
Next:
Producing Electricity
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