In
physics, the "path of least resistance" is a
heuristic from
folk physics that can sometimes, in very simple situations, describe approximately what happens. It is an approximation of the tendency to the least energy state. Other examples are "what goes up must come down" (
gravity) and "heat goes from hot to cold" (
second law of thermodynamics). But these simple descriptions are not derived from laws of physics and in more complicated cases these heuristics will fail to give even approximately correct results. The path of least resistance applies on a local, not global, reference. For example, water always flows downhill, regardless of whether briefly flowing uphill will help it gain a lower final altitude (with certain exceptions such as
superfluids and
siphons). In physics, this phenomenon allows the formation of
potential wells, where
potential energy is stored because of a barrier restricting flow to a lower energy state. == Electronics ==