Click on the battery to spawn a new battery, and same goes with the resistor. Both positive and negative terminals must be touching the wire on both the battery and the resistor for them to work. (You could say the resistor is actually a diode, even tho its not) Just try to get the most amount of overall produced energy output as possible
Shoutout to my electronics class teacher! He has us work with things up to 1 amp and 31.5 volts, so naturally, I blew out like 4 LEDs in one day. Oops. Electricity fun facts: LED=light emitting diode Diode switched AC (Alternating Current) to DC (Direct Current) Valance Electrons are on the outer shell of an atom, and produce electricity by jumping from one atom to another. 1-3 valance electrons=conductor (iron, copper, gold) 4 valance electrons=semiconductor (silicon) 5-8 valance electron=insulator (wood, skin) A capacitor holds electricity and releases it when needed (powering devices such as phones and consoles) Solder is a metal that has a low melting point, and so we use it with a tool known as a soldering iron that, on contact with skin, won’t burn it like a fire. Nice! If you touch negative and positive wires together, depending on the voltage, they will spark, and lower the voltage due to the rise in amperage, then when the amperage stops, the spark will appear, due to shorting out the circuit. (Don’t try this at home [how would you even?]) A potentiometer is a “resistor” that you may find in knobs in old homes, and can change the resistance of a circuit, dimming or brightening lights. 0.1 amps is enough to make you… have a one-sided conversation with Gordon. A singular battery (like Duracell and energizer batteries) is a cell, not a battery.