No. The current in a series circuit is the same everywhere. The voltage across a parallel circuit is the same.
By Kirchoff's current law, a series circuit has the same current everywhere.
Current flow remains the same throughout the circuit.
In a series circuit the current remains the same throughout the circuit. This is not the case for parallel circuits.
current remains same in series while divide itself in parallel circuit
in a parallel circuit, current get divided among the parallel branches in a manner so that the product of current and the resistance of each branch becomes same. The sum of the current in each branch is equal to the total current of the circuit.
in a parallel circuit, current get divided among the parallel branches in a manner so that the product of current and the resistance of each branch becomes same. The sum of the current in each branch is equal to the total current of the circuit.
In series circuits current will be the same through out the circuit. So whereever we connect the ammeter the same current is registered. But in parallel circuit current will be different in different lines. In parallel circuits the potential difference will be the same but in series pd will be different.
A: In a series circuit the current remains the same In a parallel circuit the current may divide to satisfy the branches of the loads,
Voltage
A parallel circuit is one in which the current splits at the junctions. In a parallel circuit, different components are connected across the same voltage source, allowing for multiple pathways for current to flow.
True...!
The current flowing through a series circuit is (voltage between the circuit's ends) / (sum of all resistances in the circuit). The current is the same at every point in the series circuit.