I don't know which one it is a,,,bypass,,,,current loop,,,,shunt,,,wire resistor
Bypass
A parallel circuit is an electrical circuit that has more than one current branch.
parallel circuitsThey could be called twin-loop circuits but it isn't a term in common use.
Electronics divides in analogue and digital one. Electronics is a physical branch of electron emission and behavior. Analog and digital are not two kind of electronics.
A prehensile tail.
No, since the spine and esophagus are parts of different systems.In a sense, the spine is parallel to the esophagus.An example of lateral would be the bronchial tubes, which branch off from the trachea (windpipe).
-- The voltage between the ends of each parallel branch is the same. -- The current through each parallel branch is inversely proportional to the resistance of that branch. (It's the voltage divided by the resistance of the branch.)
The least amount of current will flow through the branch of a parallel circuit that has the most resistance.
Any circuit that even has more than one branch is a parallel one.
Yes, but then it would be a 'series-parallel' circuit, not a 'parallel' circuit!
No. What you are describing is a series-parallel circuit, not a parallel circuit.
Voltage
It's usually referred to as one leg of the circuit.
Yes, the total power dissipated through the circuit is equal to the sum of the power of each branch in a parallel circuit.
You add up the currents in each branch. The current in each branch is just (voltage acrossd the parallel circuit)/(resistance of that branch) . ==================================== If you'd rather do it the more elegant way, then . . . -- Write down the reciprocal of the resistance of each branch. -- Add up the reciprocals. -- Take the reciprocal of the sum. The number you have now is the 'effective' resistance of the parallel circuit ... the single resistance that it looks like electrically. -- The total current through the parallel circuit is (voltage acrossd the parallel circuit)/(effective resistace of the parallel circuit) .
The branch with the highest resistance in a parallel circuit will have the least current flow. Ohm's Law: Current = Voltage divided by Resistance
Yes. The voltage across every branch of a parallel circuit is the same. (It may not be the supply voltage, if there's another component between the power supply and either or both ends of the parallel circuit.)
The rest of the lights in the system will remain illuminated. Except in that branch of the circuit. The parallel branch(s) get more current if the voltage potential remains the same.