Most students of electricity begin their study with what is known as direct current (DC), which
is electricity flowing in a constant direction, and/or possessing a voltage with constant polarity.
DC is the kind of electricity made by a battery (with definite positive and negative terminals),
or the kind of charge generated by rubbing certain types of materials against each other.
As useful and as easy to understand as DC is, it is not the only “kind” of electricity in use.
Certain sources of electricity (most notably, rotary electro-mechanical generators) naturally
produce voltages alternating in polarity, reversing positive and negative over time. Either as
a voltage switching polarity or as a current switching direction back and forth, this “kind” of
electricity is known as Alternating Current (AC): Figure 1.1
Whereas the familiar battery symbol is used as a generic symbol for any DC voltage source,
the circle with the wavy line inside is the generic symbol for any AC voltage source.
One might wonder why anyone would bother with such a thing as AC. It is true that in
some cases AC holds no practical advantage over DC. In applications where electricity is used
to dissipate energy in the form of heat, the polarity or direction of current is irrelevant, so
long as there is enough voltage and current to the load to produce the desired heat (power
dissipation). However, with AC it is possible to build electric generators, motors and power