Questions tagged [ground]

Ground or earth is the reference point in an electrical circuit from which other voltages are measured, or is a common return path for electric current, or a direct physical connection to the Earth.

SOURCE: wikipedia - Ground (Electricity)

Electrical circuits may be connected to ground (earth) for several reasons. In mains powered equipment, exposed metal parts are connected to ground to prevent contact with a dangerous voltage if electrical insulation fails. Connections to ground limit the build-up of static electricity when handling flammable products or when repairing electronic devices. In some telegraph and power transmission circuits, the earth itself can be used as one conductor of the circuit, saving the cost of installing a separate return conductor.

For measurement purposes, the Earth serves as a (reasonably) constant potential reference against which other potentials can be measured. An electrical ground system should have an appropriate current-carrying capability in order to serve as an adequate zero-voltage reference level. In electronic circuit theory, a "ground" is usually idealized as an infinite source or sink for charge, which can absorb an unlimited amount of current without changing its potential. Where a real ground connection has a significant resistance, the approximation of zero potential is no longer valid. Stray voltages or earth potential rise effects will occur, which may create noise in signals or if large enough will produce an electric shock hazard.

The use of the term ground (or earth) is so common in electrical and electronics applications that circuits in portable electronic devices such as cell phones and media players as well as circuits in vehicles such as ships, aircraft, and spacecraft may be spoken of as having a "ground" connection without any actual connection to the Earth. This is usually a large conductor attached to one side of the power supply (such as the "ground plane" on a printed circuit board) which serves as the common return path for current from many different components in the circuit.

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Difference between negative terminal and copper ground?

What's the difference between Negative and Ground? Like a negative terminal and a copper ground? I was reading that they are both the same; one person stated that negative is just more negative than ground. What's the difference? Do I even need…
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Why does the power company provide a neutral line?

I understand that power is often transmitted in 3 phases (with no neutral). Then, when we get to a certain substation, the power company basically gives house 1, L1, house 2, L2, house 3 L3, and connects them all to a common neutral line. That is,…
Chris
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Where is the Ground in a Simple Electronic Circuit

I am rather new to electronics, and I am reading up on the topic. I came across the term ground. I get the large scale applications like the wires leading into the ground from power lines, but how is ground applied to smaller, simpler circuits?…
Justin Chang
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Why do networks need a common ground cable?

I was reading about Serial communication in computers and embedded systems and found the following statement - Computers connected by wires must have a common ground reference, typically provided by a ground wire in the cable. (Source) What is…
Kshitiz Sharma
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Neutral vs ground wire?

I have a simple question about neutral and ground wire. Since the neutral is connected to the ground, I have problems understanding the difference. Assuming it is connected to the ground, it should be just a ground? I believe the only way it could…
Cher
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Why are there so many connections to ground in some computer connectors?

I was surprised by the number of connections to ground some pc-related connections have. For example, the parallel port has 8: Also, the ATX power supply connector has 9 ground connections: Is there any reason for such a large number of ground…
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Is the ground really the ground?

I've always been too embarrassed to ask, but the notion of "ground" has always puzzled me. The way I understand it, in theory, is that the earth acts as a giant sink/pool of electron and thus will maintain its potential. Thus, if I connect one…
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Why connect two power supply grounds?

I'm reading a tutorial and it is showing how to control a DC motor with Arduino board's micro controller. A DC motor is fed by a 9V battery and a transistor is controlling the PWM as in the figure I uploaded. But the text is also mentioning to…
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Explanation of what an "IT" ground is

A company that is looking to add equipment in their facility informed me that they have an IT ground. The ground can actually result in damage to electronic components if they aren't compatible. About the only thing I have come up with is this…
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Why do some appliances (not) need grounding?

Why do some appliances need grounding and some don't? E.g. my upright vacuum does (three pronged plug) while my shop vac does not (only two prongs). I am asking because I am not an EE professional.
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Is using same ground and VDD for MCU and motor driver module safe?

I'm trying to design an MCU prototyping board. I have two voltage regulators (3.3 and 5V) and motor driver on my board. All grounds are common, VDD of MCU comes from 3.3V reg and power supply for motor driver module from 5V reg. The current flow…
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What is the right way to understand the behaviour of shocking voltage?

I am just a starter and I am reading some beginner material about electricity. I have some problem understanding this page which was about shock current path. The writer explained why the bird is not shocked while the man got shocked: This might…
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Ground as a conductor

Let's look at the next circuit: simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab Will electric current go through R1 in the real world? Is ground like a conductor with some R supposedly > than R1, and can we illustrate this like that :…
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Why does my ESD wrist strap beep?

I have an ESD mat and wrist strap. The wrist strap plugs into a little box that beeps when either the mat or the wrist strap do not have a good connection to ground. I also have a standard Phihong 5V wall wart. I have noticed that when the…
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When is an earth ground necessary?

For large appliances I usually see a 3-prong plug while smaller electronics will use a 2 prong wall wart with a DC barrel. When designing electronics, how do you know if you'll need an earth ground? Are the two prong designs inherently more…
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