Electronic – AC current terminals

accurrentterminal

I have a question that has really been eating up my mind since High School on Ac current and voltages,
If its really true and i know it is that Ac current terminals keep alternating at a rate of 50 Hz per sec as in the case of my country.
Why do we have one constant positive terminal that keeps lighting up a tester and can even shock you?

Best Answer

Why do we have one constant positive terminal that keeps lighting up a tester

AC mains have a 'live' terminal not a positive terminal. And the voltage at live terminal varies sinusoidally in between -ve voltages and +ve voltages with respect to the neutral line at a rate of 50Hz. So the intensity of light also changes with this voltage variation. But because of persistence of vision, human eye can not detect this variation. Eye will perceive it as a constant intensity light (whose intensity will be about average of the original varying value).

In short, the inability of human eye to detect 50Hz variation creates an illusion of constant light.

Why no electric shock?

Tester uses a neon lamp inside it \$^{\mathrm{[source]}}\$. The neon lamp takes very little current to light, and thus can use the user's body capacitance to earth ground to complete the circuit. This small current won't be a problem for human body.

In short, the high resistance offered by tester limits the current through it reducing the chance of electric shock.