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Closedcircuit

A closed circuit is an electrical circuit in which a complete conductive path exists, allowing current to flow from a power source through conductors and components back to the source. The essential elements are a power source, conductive wiring, and a load that uses electrical energy. A switch or other device may be used to open or close the circuit.

If any break occurs in the path—such as an open switch, a damaged wire, or a blown

In analysis, closed circuits can be described using Ohm’s law and impedance concepts. Direct current (DC) circuits

A closed circuit can still experience faults, such as a short circuit, where an unintended low-resistance path

Closed circuits are foundational to most electrical systems, from simple devices to complex power networks, and

fuse—the
circuit
becomes
open
and
current
cannot
flow.
In
contrast,
a
closed
circuit
permits
continuous
current
flow,
though
real
circuits
always
encounter
some
resistance,
inductance,
and
capacitance
that
shape
the
behavior
of
the
current.
have
a
constant
flow,
while
alternating
current
(AC)
circuits
involve
changing
directions.
Components
in
a
closed
circuit
may
be
arranged
in
series,
where
the
same
current
passes
through
all
components,
or
in
parallel,
where
components
share
the
same
voltage
but
may
carry
different
currents.
causes
unusually
high
current.
This
can
heat
conductors
and
trip
protective
devices.
Practical
circuits
are
designed
with
safety
margins,
insulation,
proper
gauge
wires,
and
protective
devices
such
as
fuses
or
circuit
breakers
to
prevent
damage.
are
distinguished
from
open
circuits,
where
the
path
is
incomplete
and
current
cannot
flow.