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Test your basic knowledge |
Electronics
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
engineering
Instructions:
Answer
50
questions in
20 minutes
.
1 minute extra for reading the instructions.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The part of an electric system that supplies energy to other parts of the system - such as a battery that supplies energy for a flashlight.
Source
Open circuit
Electrostatic field
Free electrons
2. The basic materials that make up all other materials; they exist by themselves (such as copper - hydrogen - carbon) or in combination with other elements (water is a combination of the elements hydrogen and oxygen).
Conventional current flow
Orbit
Stable atom
Element
3. The part of an electric system that affects what the system does; a switch to turn on and turn off a light is a type of control.
Element
DC Current
Control
Current
4. A neutrally charged atom
Current
Neutron
DC Current
Energy
5. Something that can turn on or off the flow of electricty.
Switch
Orbital
Conductor
Ampere (A)
6. An object which resists the flow of electricity.
Load
Resistor
Electrostatic field
Source
7. The path along which electrons travel around the nucleus of an atom.
Volt (V)
Electrostatic field
Orbit
Work
8. A charge on a material that is said to be either positive or negative.
Static charge
Neutron
Electron current flow
Why resistors are important
9. A material that offers a high resistance to electric current flow.
Electrostatic field
Insulator
Static charge
Electron
10. Light Emitting Diode
LED
Ohms
Resistance
Neutron
11. V= IR or Voltage is equal to current times resistance
Electromotive force (EMF)
Valence electrons
DC Current
Ohms
12. A circuit that forms a complete path so that electric current can flow through it.
Electron current flow
Closed circuit
Voltage
Semiconductor
13. A positively charged atom
Element
Proton
Power
Volt (V)
14. The unit of measurement of electric resistance.
Neutron
Orbit
Element
Ohm (O)
15. Current flows in one direction only.
Capacitor
DC Current
Stable atom
Why resistors are important
16. The rate at which work is done.
Element
Short circuit
Free electrons
Power
17. The unit of measurement of electric power.
Open circuit
Valence electrons
Watt (W)
Load
18. Electric force - or pressure - that causes current to flow in a circuit.
Neutron
Voltage
Kinetic energy
Proton
19. The part of an electric system that shows whether the system is on or off or that a specific quantity is present.
Electromotive force (EMF)
Resistor
Metallic bonding
Indicator
20. Current flow assumed to be in the direction of electron movement from a negative (-) potential to a positive (+) potential.
Load
Electron current flow
Potential energy
Electron
21. The capacity to do work.
Insulator
AC
Stable atom
Energy
22. Areas through which electrons move; designated as s - p - d - and f.
Free electrons
Watt (W)
Orbital
Closed circuit
23. The unit of electric charge - which is the basic unit of measurement for current flow in an electric circuit.
Free electrons
Conductor
Closed circuit
Ampere (A)
24. Energy that exists because of position.
Resistor
Indicator
Orbital
Potential energy
25. A unit of electric charge that represents a large number of electrons. ~ 6.28 x 1018 electrons
AC
Coulomb (C)
Metallic bonding
Element
26. The pressure - or force - that causes electric current to flow.
Voltage
Volt (V)
Electromotive force (EMF)
Work
27. A circuit that forms a direct path across a voltage source (with little or no resistance) so that a very high and possibly unsafe electric current flows.
Voltage
Static electricity
Short circuit
Proton
28. Resistors are objects that resist flow. If a light bulb gets to much electricty it can burn out. In other terms - NOT GOOD!!
Why resistors are important
Control
Path
Voltage
29. Current flow assumed to be in a direction from high charge concentration (+) to low charge concentration (-).
Metallic bonding
Conventional current flow
Potential energy
Free electrons
30. Current periodically reverses direction
Proton
Why resistors are important
Control
AC Current
31. Do Opposites attract or move away from each other?
DC Current
Open circuit
Free electrons
Opposites attract
32. The transforming or transferring of energy.
Work
Capacitor
Open circuit
Electromotive force (EMF)
33. The space around a charged material in which the influence of the electric charge is experienced.
Electron current flow
Voltage
Element
Electrostatic field
34. An atom that does not release electrons under normal conditions.
Power
Stable atom
Proton
Metallic bonding
35. Energy that exists because of movement.
Semiconductor
Conductor
Kinetic energy
AC
36. The smallest particle to which an element can be reduced and still retain its characteristics.
Electron
Watt (W)
Coulomb (C)
Atom
37. Alternating Current
AC
Valence electrons
Work
Semiconductor
38. The part of an electric system through which electrons travel from a source to a load - such as the electric wiring used in a building.
Path
Power
Kinetic energy
Electrostatic field
39. A circuit that has a broken path so that no electric current can flow through it. A circuit with infinite resistance.
Insulator
AC
Open circuit
Voltage
40. An atomic particle said to have a negative (-) electric charge; electrons are the means by which the transfer of electric energy takes place.
Stable atom
Electron
Electromotive force (EMF)
Semiconductor
41. The unit of measurement of electric potential.
Free electrons
Open circuit
Electromotive force (EMF)
Volt (V)
42. The method by which loosely held atoms are bound together in metals.
AC
Metallic bonding
Electron current flow
Proton
43. The difference of electrical potential between to points on a circuit
Metallic bonding
AC
Coulomb (C)
Voltage
44. A material that has a value of electric resistance between that of a conductor and an insulator and is used to manufacture solid- state devices such as diodes and transistors.
Closed circuit
AC
Semiconductor
Valence electrons
45. Electricity at rest caused by accumulation of either positive or negative electric charge.
Static electricity
Resistance
Work
Proton
46. Electrons in the outer orbit of an atom.
Ampere (A)
Switch
Valence electrons
Insulator
47. A device that stores energy between a pair of conductors
Ohms
Potential energy
Capacitor
AC Current
48. Electrons located in the outer orbit of an atom that are easily removed and result in flow of electric current.
Open circuit
Opposites attract
Free electrons
Electromotive force (EMF)
49. A material that allows electric current to flow through it easily.
Kinetic energy
Conductor
Valence electrons
Electromotive force (EMF)
50. (R) The opposition to the flow of electric current in a circuit; its unit of measurement is the ohm (O).
Orbital
Voltage
Path
Resistance