The world’s biggest source of energy for producing electricity comes from coal. The burning of coal in furnaces heats boiler water until it becomes steam which then spins turbines attached to generators.
Lightning is a discharge of electricity in the atmosphere. Lightning bolts can travel at around 210,000 kph (130,000 mph), while reaching nearly 30,000 °C (54,000 °F) in temperature.
Electricity plays a role in the way your heart beats. Muscle cells in the heart are contracted by electricity going through the heart.
- Electrocardiogram (ECG) machines used in hospitals measure the electricity going through someone’s heart, when the person is healthy it usually shows a line moving across a screen with regular spikes as the heart beats.
You may have heard of direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC).
- The difference between the two is in the way the electrons flow.
- In DC electrons move in a single direction while in AC they change directions, switching between backwards and forwards.
- The electricity used in your home is AC while DC comes from sources that include batteries.
Back in the 1880’s there was even a ‘war of currents’ between Thomas Edison (who helped invent DC) and Nikola Tesla (who helped invent AC).
- Both wanted their system to be used with AC eventually winning out due to the fact that it is safer and can be used over longer distances.
Electric fields work in a similar way to gravity with an important exception being
- that while gravity always attracts, electric fields can either attract or repulse.
American Benjamin Franklin carried out extensive electricity research in the 18th century, inventing the lightning rod amongst his many discoveries. .
- Lightning rods protect buildings in the event of lightning by conducting lightning strikes through a grounded wire.
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