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Concept module
Basic Circuits
Keep one battery and two resistors in view while current, voltage, resistance, Ohm's law, and the contrast between series and parallel all stay tied to one honest circuit.
Interactive lab
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Stable links
Why it behaves this way
Explanation
A basic circuit needs only a source of voltage, a path for charge to move, and resistance that limits how much current the source can drive. Ohm's law connects those three ideas with one compact rule: more voltage pushes more current, and more resistance holds that current back.
This module stays intentionally bounded. One battery drives two resistors, and the only topology change is whether those resistors sit in one series loop or in two parallel branches. That is enough to teach current, voltage, equivalent resistance, and the intuition behind Ohm's law without turning the page into an electronics workbench.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
Step through the frozen example
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View plansFor the current circuit, what one-number equivalent resistance does the battery feel, and what total current follows from that load?
12 V
6 ohm
6 ohm
1. Start with the live topology
2. Substitute the resistor values now on screen
3. Use Ohm's law on the whole circuit
4. Compute the total current
Equivalent resistance and total current
Current-split checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
Current gets used up by the first resistor, so less current reaches the second resistor in a series loop.
Current is the rate of charge flow through one continuous loop. In a steady series circuit, the same amount of charge per second passes every point in that loop.
What changes across a resistor is voltage, not the amount of current that remains. The resistor creates a voltage drop while the loop current stays the same.
Quick test
Reasoning
Question 1 of 5
A battery drives two resistors in one steady series loop. Which statement about the current is correct?
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one battery on the left and two resistor blocks arranged either in one series loop or in two parallel branches. A readout card on the right reports the live battery voltage, resistor values, equivalent resistance, total current, branch currents, and branch voltages.
Optional overlays add current arrows on the wires, voltage labels on the battery and resistors, and node markers that show when two branches share the same top and bottom nodes. Compare mode adds a dashed ghost circuit for the second setup so topology or resistor changes stay visible without changing the main stage.
The stage is intentionally bounded to one battery and two resistors. There are no capacitors, switches, or symbolic solvers, so every displayed change stays tied to the same beginner-friendly current, voltage, and resistance logic.
Graph summary
The Ohm's law current map plots total current, branch A current, and branch B current against battery voltage for the current resistor setup and topology. Hovering the graph previews a different battery voltage on the stage without changing the actual controls.
The voltage-share graph sweeps only resistor B while holding the battery and resistor A fixed. In series it shows how the source voltage is divided, and in parallel it shows that both branches stay pinned to the full battery voltage even as the branch currents differ.
Keep the electricity story moving
Keep this idea moving
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Power and Energy in Circuits
Keep one source and one resistive load in view while current, power, and accumulated energy over time stay tied to the same honest circuit.
Series and Parallel Circuits
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.
Equivalent Resistance
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.