Yes, quite easily. A current of **** (value blanked for safety reasons) is enough to cause the heart to fail, if a person is unlucky enough to have this happen to them.
we use resistors in an electric circuit to describe how a wire works and to control the flow of electricity
I guess Electric Circuit....
Voltage causes current to flow in an electric circuit.
The term is "circuit" (from the same root as circle) An electric circuit must be uninterrupted for the current to flow. (This is why circuit-breakers are also called circuit-interruptors.)
the history of the electric circuit is that the person who made it his name is jack kilby but the history is that the electric circuit was one of the easiest way was to make the electric circuit when the electricity went out. THE END
Anything with a voltage power source, connecting wire and a load is an electric circuit. Hence if you have a flashlight you have an electric circuit.
The impedance of an electric circuit is the measure of the opposition presented by a circuit when the current and voltage is applied.
You can start an electric circuit by closing the circuit, typically by turning a switch on. You can stop an electric circuit by opening the circuit, usually by turning a switch off or disconnecting a wire.
When energy passes through a metal it creates an electric circuit.
An electric circuit is opened whenever a part of it is not connected to anything.
Voltage causes current to flow in an electric circuit.
for made of electric circuit safety device,