The capacitor conducts electricity only while charged. While it is charging, the circuit is open and electricity flows through neither the capacitor nor the transistor, all of it ending up in the electromagnetic field of the capacitor until it is charged, when the capacitor is able to conduct electricity.
A capacitor is an electrical component that stores charge in an electric field. The capacitance of a capacitor is the amount of charge that can be stored per unit voltage. The energy stored in a capacitor is proportional to the capacitance and the voltage.
A Capacitor is an electrical component which stores a certain amount of electric charge between two metal plates at a certain potential difference.
The energy stored in a capacitor is proportional to the capacitance and the voltage. When it comes to electronics, the significant components that serve as the pillars in an electric circuit are resistors, inductors, and capacitors. The primary role of a capacitor is to store a certain amount of electric charge in place.
When a capacitor is connected to a power source, electrons accumulate at one of the conductors (the negative plate), while electrons are removed from the other conductor (the positive plate). This creates a potential difference (voltage) across the plates and establishes an electric field in the dielectric material between them.
That post improved quite significantly! The electrons don't actually pass through the capacitor. As one plate of a capacitor gains electrons, that creates an electric field that repels the electrons of the other plate, and it's those electrons that go on to move through the stuff on the other side of the capacitor.