Voltage will be constant.
Resistance is dependent on the components in the circuit.
Source: Electronics Technician for the US Govt
If additional resistance is connected in parallel with a circuit the supply voltage will decrease?
No change in supply voltage as additional resistance is connected in parallel circuit.
It is halved. coz voltage=current * resistance
V = IR Where, V = voltage I = current R = resistance Thus if resistance is increased with constant voltage current will decrease
the term voltage is constant in parallel circuits
Inversely. As resistance increases, current dereases; given that the applied voltage is constant.
If resistance is halved while voltage remains constant, the current will double.
Always voltage constant in parallel circuit if you look your house wiring all are in parallel therefore 220 volt present in every house but current is different
A parallel branch is a current path. In general, current follows paths, voltage drops across components, and resistance is the voltage divided by current of specific circuit elements.
in a parallel circuit resistance decreases increasing the current.
The current through each resistor is equal to the voltage across it divided by its resistance for series and parallel circuits.
If the ratio of voltage to current is constant, then the circuit is obeying Ohm's Law. If the ratio changes for variations in voltage, then the circuit does not obey Ohm's Law.