Electron drift speed
Individual electrons drift through a copper wire at only about 1 millimeter per second, but the electric field travels near light speed.
Physics
In the time it took you to read this sentence, electrons in your device's circuits completed billions of laps around closed loops - carrying information and power at nearly the speed of light. Electricity seems instantaneous and invisible. But what is actually moving, and how does it do so much work? Picture a copper wire as a pipe crammed with billions of tiny balls (electrons). Voltage is the water pressure; current is how fast the balls flow. A resistor is a narrow section of pipe that slows the flow and converts the energy to heat or light.
Electricity is the flow of electric charge - most commonly electrons - through a conductor. Atoms in conductive materials like copper have loosely bound outer electrons that can move freely. A voltage (difference in electric potential) between two points of a circuit acts like a pressure difference, driving electrons to flow from negative to positive terminal. The rate of that flow is current (measured in amperes). Opposition to flow is resistance (measured in ohms). Ohm's Law ties these together: current equals voltage divided by resistance (I = V/R). Electrical energy is converted to work, heat, or light at the points of resistance in a circuit.

Electron drift speed
Individual electrons drift through a copper wire at only about 1 millimeter per second, but the electric field travels near light speed.
Ohm's Law
Current (I) = Voltage (V) / Resistance (R). Increase voltage, current increases; increase resistance, current decreases.
AC vs DC
AC (alternating current) reverses direction 50-60 times per second; DC (direct current) flows one way. AC is easier to transform for power grids.
Myth: Electricity flows positive to negative
Conventional current direction (positive to negative) is a historical convention. Electrons actually flow from negative to positive.
Myth: AC is always more dangerous than DC
Both can be lethal. DC can cause sustained muscle contraction at lower voltages. Danger depends on voltage, current, and path through body.
Related Articles

Chemistry & Physics
From the nucleus to chemical bonds, discover how atoms are structured, how they form molecules, and why quantum mechanics is needed to explain their behavior.

Physics
Explore how gravity works according to Newton and Einstein, why time slows near massive objects, and why gravity is the weakest yet most dominant force in the universe.

Molecular Biology
Discover how DNA stores genetic information, replicates itself, and instructs cells to build proteins - explained simply with real science.

It is all about spinning electrons
Magnets work because electrons in some materials spin in the same direction, creating a collective magnetic field. Here is how that actually produces the force you feel.

It is all about pressure
Airplanes fly by generating lift with their wings. Air moving over the curved top of the wing travels faster, creating lower pressure that pulls the plane upward.

It moves heat, it does not make cold
A refrigerator does not create cold. It moves heat from inside the fridge to outside. Here is how that works using a circulating refrigerant.
Keep Exploring
Jump back to this shelf, browse generated topics, or let TinyThat choose the next question.