Contributor: Meghan Vestal. Lesson ID: 11003
Conductors aren't just on trains; they're in wires and maybe your pocket! Online lessons, games, and safe experiments teach you hair-raising truth about how things do and don't conduct electricity!
Let's find out!
Everything around you, even invisible gasses, fall into one of two categories: conductors or insulators.
Conductors are materials that transfer electricity because they allow electrons to freely flow.
Most people are aware that most types of metal are conductors. But there are a lot of other things besides metal that will conduct electricity.
That shock is an electrical current, and you feel it because you are a conductor. Other types of conductors include water, carbon, and mercury.
Insulators are the opposite of conductors. Insulators do not transfer electricity because they do not allow electrons to freely flow.
The reason some people say this is because tires are made of rubber. Rubber is an insulator. Therefore, you cannot get electrocuted during a lighting storm if you are inside a car because the rubber tires will prevent the electrical current from continuing to flow into the car. Other types of insulators include wood, cotton, and plastic.
To learn more about how conductors and insulators work, read The Physics Classroom's lesson entitled Conductors and Insulators.
Examine the room you are sitting in.
Continue on to the Got It? section for practice!