Electric vehicles use electricity to make their wheels spin and move you from one place to another.
Imagine you have a toy car that runs on batteries. When you press the button, it zooms across the floor. That’s kind of how electric cars work, except instead of a small battery, they use a big one, and instead of a button, there's a pedal you push down like when you ride your bike.
How Electricity Moves the Wheels
Inside an electric car, there's something called a motor. Think of it like a tiny engine that loves to spin. When electricity flows into the motor, it starts spinning really fast, almost like when you turn on a fan and it whirls around.
This spinning makes the wheels go round too! It’s like when you push your toy car forward and it rolls across the room. The more electricity you send to the motor, the faster the wheels spin, and the quicker the car goes.
Electric cars are like super-smart toy cars, they use electricity from a battery to power everything, making them zoom around without needing gas or oil.
Examples
- An electric bike starts moving when you press a button.
Ask a question
See also
- How Can a Single Atom Hold a Whole World Inside It?
- How Can a Single Atom Be Both a Particle and a Wave?
- How Can a Single Battery Power Your Whole Phone?
- How Can a Tiny Particle Make You Sick?
- How Can a Single Piece of Plastic Float an Entire Ship?