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Electrons are negatively charged, and thus "flow" from negative to positive. But they actually move very slowly, you'd be surprised.No idea what "voltage goes neg to pos and current goes pos to neg" means.
Hi Werd,electrons as we know always go from neg. to pos.I'm trying like you to grasp some of this stuff at 53.I got these old red and orange paper back books on e-bay that were used in the 50's to train Navy guys as fast as possible.In issue #1 it is stated in the early days of electronics,the( conventional current) was from positive to negitive,but that was wrong,an electron current goes from neg. to pos.(Basic Electricity by Van Valkenburg...Vol.1).....Hey Werd,I'm lost a little bit too.I went to summer school for math,and Ohms law is looking like a Marine boot camp obsticle....let me know..Mark Korda
electrons and current travel in opposite directions according to this EE i was listening to. Its just an interesting theory.
It's not a theory, it's just how it works.
The confusing part is text books! At one level they write about electricity (not electrons) flowing positive to negative yet at another level electricity flows negative to positive. Back in vacuum tube days the negative to positive flow made more sense because it was the same as electron flow in tubes. But now with solid state, electrons flow one way and holes flow the other.
That's because they define current movement as movement of the "holes", in this case the positive charge. One could easily define current movement as movement of the electrons. It just means every sign would have to be reversed.
Which way do electrons flow? Do they go positive to negative or vise versa? I only ask this since i heard a very interesting theory that voltage goes "neg to pos and current goes pos to neg". And they are measureable where voltage drops. Interestiing theory from an EE that picked this up in university.
Electrons flow from negative to positive.However, in the world of electrical engineering, current is defined as going from positive to negative. Back in the day, Ben Franklin defined the direction of current flow, but at the time the existence of the electron was not known. Hey, he had a 50% chance of getting it right..The right hand rule makes the assumption that "current" flows pos to neg, this is the standard engineering convention.The left hand rule is used for the flow of electrons, this is the standard beam physics convention.You've no idea the confusion this generates when explained to a roomful of high energy particle physicists.. So, don't be concerned that it seems confusing..it is..Cheers, John
Clearly, you've never been in a room full of high energy particle physicists.
Really? Why is it clear that I have not?I was presenting magnetic conventions to 40 or so particle physicists, so that all the magnets I am responsible for connecting are wires correctly...900 of them.When I defined how the magnets are powered to produce the correct fields, nobody complained..when I defined the magnetic fields for the bending of the beam, one third of the room raised their right hand, three fingers orthogonal...one third the left hand, and one third raised both.The visual was so funny I almost peed my pants..Cheers, John
Well, I'm not sure what you mean by "particle physicist".
Not having been in the room you refer to, I can't comment on specifics, but I have known hundreds of particle physicists, and I can assure you any one of them (as defined above) would think it hilarious that such an elementary issue should be considered confusing.
In the interest of full disclosure, I should say I am a particle physicist. (Or was; I'm now retired.)