Electricity

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Electricity provides the power for computers, microwave ovens, and more generally anything that needs to be plugged in to work. It is produced by batteries is used in portable devices such as flashlights and walkmans. Electricity is also the cause of lightning. Another phenomenon caused by electricity is that if you rub a balloon against a sweater and then hold it close to your hair, the balloon will attract your hair.

In a flashlight, the batteries produce an electric current that is transported to a light bulb. The current provides the power for the light bulb to produce light, and is then transported back to the battery. The loop formed by the battery, the light bulb, and the connections between them is an electric circuit. This needs to be a closed loop; if one of the connections is broken or the light bulb is removed, then no current will run.

A power plant produces a lot of electricity. Big cables transport this electricity over miles to houses and factories, eventually bringing it to the electricity sockets in your house. If you plug in the television, then an electric current can run through the cable to the television, providing the power which it needs. The current returns through a different wire in the same cable to the socket, thus closing the circuit. An electricity plug thus has at least two pins, one for bringing the current from the socket to the television and the other one for returning it.

Electric current is caused by the movement of electrons, very small particles with a negative electric charge that appear in all materials. In some materials, like wood, the electrons stick to their place and thus electric current cannot run through these materials or only with great difficulties. Such materials are called isolators. Conductors are materials, like copper, in which the electrons can move around freely; they can carry a current.

Electricity is closely related to magnetism. Physicists usually study both phenomena together, and they call the combination electromagnetism. Electromagnetism is one of the four fundamental forces (the other are gravity, the weak nuclear force and the strong nuclear force).