T
trnqk7
Full Audioholic
Woolly thinking? Most people do not know or care what a vector is or does. They want a simple explanation that they can understand-not an explanation that goes over many (not all, I do in fact have a EE degree) people's heads and merely makes them feel overwhelmed. What I said may not be "technically accurate", but for the purposes of discussion with the vast majority of the population, it is more than accurate enough and more than likely, is soemthing that they will actually understand enough to be able to describe it to others. An think about the very wording you used-"A charge is static. Just like the charge in a battery, until you draw current, the the charge falls." Well, you just described a static quantity as changing...which would make it not static. If the charge falls when current is drawn...would you not associate then that current is the charge? Or more specifically, electrons are the charge, and since electrons make up current (kinda by definition) then charge is current and current is charge! Specifically, current (i) = dQ(change in charge)/change in time. I don't think most people want to get into calculus on the forums, so it is simple enough and fairly accurate to say that current = charge.
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