How exactly does electricity work?

216 views

Okay, so what I would like explained is why does it not affect you when you’re not grounded? In my mind, the opposite would make more sense. Like say you touched an electric wire while standing on the ground, I would imagine the electricity would travel through you and into the ground causing little to no pain. While if you were not grounded and touched a wire, the electricity would have no where to go then it would shoot out of your body or something, but unless I’m mistaken, thats not how it works. Are there any exceptions for this, like say if theres enough volts could it kill you even if you weren’t grounded ? Like if I wasn’t grounded and got hit by lightning it would still probably kill me, right? Also how does grounding work? isn’t everything grounded other than planes or helicopters? I have 0 experience with anything electrical and no idea if its even considered physics so apologies if these are dumb questions- also ESL so sorry for any grammatical errors.

In: 1

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Electricity does useful stuff and damage when it flows.

Eg, when the current flows through a light bulb, it heats up the filament and makes it glow. Or when if lows through a motor, it creates magnetic fields that get turned into motion.

If there’s no current, the electricity won’t do much.

>Like say you touched an electric wire while standing on the ground, I would imagine the electricity would travel through you and into the ground causing little to no pain

It would flow through you, and do stuff (depending on the voltage, current and AC frequency) such as exciting nerves and muscles (which you experience as an electric shock) to generating heat (electrical burns), or sometimes less harmful things, such as flowing through your skin and not affecting anything internal (eg, very high frequency AC), or having no effect (low current).

>While if you were not grounded and touched a wire, the electricity would have no where to go then it would shoot out of your body or something

If it has nowhere to go, there’s no current. If it shoots out of your body, it does so by moving, that is, it DOES have somewhere to go, and forms a current. An “electric current” is a synonym for “moving electric charge”

>like say if theres enough volts could it kill you even if you weren’t grounded ? Like if I wasn’t grounded and got hit by lightning it would still probably kill me, right?

Everything conducts electricity, but some things do it so badly that they basically don’t. Air, for example. Or rubber. You can hold an insulated household electrical cable with no problem, but you absolutely should avoid (and not use) an electrical cable whose insulation has started to come off.

However, if you push up the voltage enough, it will everntually force anything to start conducting electricity. Voltage is like a “pressure”, trying to force current to move. Just like high enough pressure will eventually crack a water pipe, so high enough voltage will eventually force the insulators to make a way for the current to flow. Lightning is an example of this – a voltage difference forms between the clouds and the ground, until eventually the air is forced to carry the current from the sky to the ground in one massively powerful spark.

>Also how does grounding work? isn’t everything grounded other than planes or helicopters?

Grounding means making a path that’s easy for electricity to flow along, that reaches the ground. In an appliance, that will be the “ground wire”, which will usually be attached to the outside box of the appliance, so if the “current wires” lose their insulation and start leaking current, it can go straight to the ground along this wire. That will trip the RCD’s in your house, since suddenly the appliance is drawing a lot of current. Without the ground wire, YOU might become the de facto ground wire when you touch it, which would not be a good thing. You might not be a very good conductor of electricity, but you’re certainly good enough to get a shock.

You are viewing 1 out of 3 answers, click here to view all answers.