treddie
Computer
- Dec 17, 2005
- 417
Howdie. It has been some years since I studied electronics (I have very little practical experience with it), but back then I had a question which seemed not to have an answer. But someone posed the same situation and now the question is back. Simply put, it is this:
Suppose you have a battery charged to 12V. If I connect a wire without a resistor across the leads, current will flow rapidly and the battery will overheat and might get destroyed, because I have completed the circuit with minimal resistance. Now if I take that same battery charged to 12V and instead of shorting across the terminals, I instead connect the negative terminal to a huge steel ground plate while leaving the positive terminal open, my sense is that no current will flow into the plate or hardly any since there is not a completed circuit. My reasoning is that the electrons in the battery are still attracted to that 12V potential inside the battery, and connecting the negative terminal to some other external ground does not attract the electrons any stronger than the potential inside the battery does. I imagine that the only possibilities are that the electrons will not get all bunched up trying to cross the battery's internal potential, and essentially "hating" each other will try to get as far from each other as the battery's design will allow. PERHAPS, a little current will flow out to the big metal plate only due to the electrons' mutual repulsion.
Is this correct, or am I getting it all wrong? Do the electrons see the huge steel plate as the other side of the battery?
Thanks for any responses!
Suppose you have a battery charged to 12V. If I connect a wire without a resistor across the leads, current will flow rapidly and the battery will overheat and might get destroyed, because I have completed the circuit with minimal resistance. Now if I take that same battery charged to 12V and instead of shorting across the terminals, I instead connect the negative terminal to a huge steel ground plate while leaving the positive terminal open, my sense is that no current will flow into the plate or hardly any since there is not a completed circuit. My reasoning is that the electrons in the battery are still attracted to that 12V potential inside the battery, and connecting the negative terminal to some other external ground does not attract the electrons any stronger than the potential inside the battery does. I imagine that the only possibilities are that the electrons will not get all bunched up trying to cross the battery's internal potential, and essentially "hating" each other will try to get as far from each other as the battery's design will allow. PERHAPS, a little current will flow out to the big metal plate only due to the electrons' mutual repulsion.
Is this correct, or am I getting it all wrong? Do the electrons see the huge steel plate as the other side of the battery?
Thanks for any responses!