Ohm's law for the load
With one source and one ohmic load, current is set by the source voltage and the load resistance.
Concept module
Keep one source and one resistive load in view while current, power, and accumulated energy over time stay tied to the same honest circuit.
The simulation shows one battery on the left, one resistive load on the top wire, and one return path on the bottom wire. A readout card on the right reports the live source voltage, load resistance, current, power, accumulated energy, and a short qualitative state label for the load response. Moving charge markers circulate around the loop to keep the current direction visible over time. Optional overlays add current arrows, source and load voltage labels, a power-rate bar tied to the load response, and an energy meter that accumulates as the run continues or as you scrub the time rail. The model is intentionally bounded to one ohmic source-load loop. There are no capacitors, inductors, or nonlinear devices, so every displayed change stays tied to the same beginner-level relations among voltage, current, resistance, power, and energy over time. At t = 0 s, a 12 V source drives a 8 ohm load. The current is 1.5 A, so the load power is 18 W and the delivered energy is 0 J. The load is dissipating power quickly enough that its visible response is strong but still controlled.
Interactive lab
Keep the stage, graph, and immediate control feedback in one working view.
Time
0.00 s / 12.0 sLivePause to inspect a specific moment, then step or scrub through it.Power and Energy in Circuits
One source, one resistive load, one honest time axis. The glow, current flow, power readout, and cumulative energy bar all come from the same live circuit state instead of from separate teaching widgets.
Graphs
Switch graph views without breaking the live stage and time link.
Energy transferred over time
Follow one fixed setup through time. The slope of the line is the current power, so steeper lines mean the circuit is transferring energy more quickly.
Controls
Adjust the physical parameters and watch the motion respond.
Raises or lowers the source push without changing the load itself.
Changes how strongly the load limits current in this bounded ohmic-circuit model.
More tools
Secondary controls, alternate presets, and less-used toggles stay nearby without crowding the main bench.
More presets
Presets
Predict -> manipulate -> observe
Keep the active prompt next to the controls so each change has an immediate visible consequence.
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Equation map
Select a symbol to highlight the matching control and the graph or overlay it most directly changes.
Raises the push from the source. At fixed load resistance it increases current and makes the power curve bend upward faster than the current line.
Equations in play
Choose an equation to sync the active symbol, control highlight, and related graph mapping.
More tools
Detailed noticing prompts, guided overlays, and challenge tasks stay available without taking over the main bench.
What to notice
Use the current prompt as a compact investigation cue. Each one points at a pattern the stage and graphs already show in the live circuit.
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Why it matters
Guided overlays
Focus one overlay at a time to see what it represents and what to notice in the live motion.
Overlay focus
Shows the one-loop current direction and the live current label on the wire.
What to notice
Why it matters
Power only makes sense once the current stays tied to the same visible circuit.
Challenge mode
Use the same single-load circuit for compact power targets. The checklist reads the live current and power, so rate and total stay tied to one honest setup.
6 of 7 checks
Suggested start
The checklist updates from the live simulation state, active graph, overlays, inspect time, and compare setup.
Ohm's law for the load
With one source and one ohmic load, current is set by the source voltage and the load resistance.
Electrical power
Power is the rate of electrical energy transfer right now.
Power from source voltage
At fixed resistance, power rises with the square of voltage.
Power from current
At fixed resistance, larger current means much larger power.
Energy over time
Energy accumulates as the current power rate continues for more time.
Progress
Not startedMastery: NewLocal-firstStart exploring and Open Model Lab will keep this concept's progress on this browser first. Challenge mode has 1 compact task ready. No finished quick test, solved challenge, or completion mark is saved yet.
Try this setup
Copy the live bench state and reopen this concept with the same controls, graph, overlays, and compare context.
Stable links
Starter track
Step 4 of 60 / 6 completeEarlier steps still set up Power and Energy in Circuits.
Previous step: Basic Circuits.
Short explanation
Electrical power tells you how quickly a circuit is transferring energy right now. In one bounded resistive circuit, that rate comes straight from the same voltage, current, and resistance you already use in Ohm's law.
This page keeps the model intentionally small: one source drives one resistive load. That is enough to show how current changes with voltage and resistance, why the load brightens or heats more when power rises, and how energy keeps accumulating over time while the power stays fixed for one chosen setup.
Key ideas
Live power checks
12 V
8 ohm
1. Start with Ohm's law for the one-loop load
2. Substitute the current source and load values
3. Compute the live current
4. Use the power relation on the same live circuit
5. Compute the load power
Current and power
Energy-over-time checkpoint
Prediction prompt
Check your reasoning
Common misconception
A larger resistance means the component is working harder, so it must always use more power.
For one fixed source voltage and one ohmic load, larger resistance limits the current more strongly.
Because both current and power fall in that case, the higher-resistance load actually transfers energy more slowly even though the resistance number is larger.
Quick test
Reasoning
Question 1 of 5
Choose one answer to reveal feedback, then test the idea in the live system if a guided example is available.
Accessible description
The simulation shows one battery on the left, one resistive load on the top wire, and one return path on the bottom wire. A readout card on the right reports the live source voltage, load resistance, current, power, accumulated energy, and a short qualitative state label for the load response.
Moving charge markers circulate around the loop to keep the current direction visible over time. Optional overlays add current arrows, source and load voltage labels, a power-rate bar tied to the load response, and an energy meter that accumulates as the run continues or as you scrub the time rail.
The model is intentionally bounded to one ohmic source-load loop. There are no capacitors, inductors, or nonlinear devices, so every displayed change stays tied to the same beginner-level relations among voltage, current, resistance, power, and energy over time.
Graph summary
The energy-transfer graph plots delivered energy against time for the current circuit. Hovering or scrubbing lets you inspect the same moment on the stage and the same cumulative-energy value on the graph.
The current-voltage and power-voltage graphs sweep source voltage while the load stays fixed, so they show the different current and power responses clearly. The power-resistance graph sweeps only load resistance at one fixed source voltage to show why larger resistance lowers power in this bounded model.
Keep the circuit story going
These suggestions come from the concept registry, so the reason label reflects either curated guidance or the fallback progression logic.
Switch the same two loads between one loop and two branches, then track how current, voltage, brightness, and charge flow reorganize without changing the battery.
Reduce one highlighted resistor group into an equivalent block, then collapse the whole mixed circuit honestly and watch how the total current and grouped behavior change together.
Map how source-charge sign and distance shape electric potential, compare potential differences across one honest scan line, and connect the downhill slope of V to the electric field.