
Overview
It's time for Bill Nye to shed a little light on electricity. Electricity might seem mysterious, but once you understand the science the light goes on (so to speak). You flip a switch, and the lights turn on. You push the play button, and your personal stereo starts playing music. When you flip the switch or push play, you start a flow of electrons. Electricity is the flow of electrons, and electrons are very tiny charged particles. Electrons are found in atoms, the tiny pieces that all stuff is made from. We can make electrons flow in two ways. Batteries make electricity by mixing up chemicals -- making a chemical reaction that forces electrons to move in a path from the battery to the personal stereo and back to the battery. Electricity that turns on lights in your home is made by power plants. Most power plants use big machines called generators to make electrons by twirling wire in a magnet. The magnet makes electrons in the wire move around, creating electricity.
-
1 - 1Flight September 10, 1993
-
1 - 2Earth's Crust September 17, 1993
-
1 - 3Dinosaurs September 24, 1993
-
1 - 4Skin October 01, 1993
-
1 - 5Buoyancy October 08, 1993
-
1 - 6Gravity October 15, 1993
-
1 - 7Digestion October 22, 1993
-
1 - 8Phases of Matter October 29, 1993
-
1 - 9Biodiversity November 05, 1993
-
1 - 10Simple Machines November 12, 1993
-
1 - 11The Moon November 19, 1993
-
1 - 12Sound November 26, 1993
-
1 - 13Garbage December 03, 1993
-
1 - 14Structures December 10, 1993
-
1 - 15Earth's Seasons December 17, 1993
-
1 - 16Light & Color December 24, 1993
-
1 - 17Cells January 21, 1994
-
1 - 18Electricity January 28, 1994
-
1 - 19Outer Space February 04, 1994
-
1 - 20Eyeball February 11, 1994