Anyway, if somebody could be nice enough to explain to me what it is in nooby detail and answer my question too, that would be awesome.
Here is my noob explanation. A speaker is kind of like an electric motor. It has a stationary fixed magnet and a voice coil that's attached to a cone. When an alternating electric current, (AC), is applied to the voice coil the resulting electromagnetic, (EM), field interacts with the magnetic field of the fixed magnet causing the voice coil to rapidly move in and out. This, of course, causes the cone to move air that produces the sound waves.
When you apply a direct electric current, (DC), to the voice coil it will produce a stationary EM field that will cause the voice coil to travel in or out, depending on the polarity of the DC, and stay in that position as long as the current is applied. You can try this with a small battery and speaker. I do it sometimes to check the phasing of an unkknown speaker. If the speaker moves outward then the termanal connected to the + side of the battery is the positive phase terminal of the speaker. I usually use a 1.5V AA battery for small speakers but I've used a 9V before too. If too much current is applied to the speaker you can damage the voice coil. The small batteries should be fine but though if you want to experiment.