Nothing.
The voltage measured across an open in a series circuit is the equivalent of the sourse voltage.
there is 120V across the circuit.
there is 120V across the circuit.
The resistance is increased, the voltage across each bulb is decreased and the current through the circuit is reduced.
It doesn't. In a series circuit, the largest voltage drop occurs across the largest resistor; the smallest voltage drop occurs across the smallest resistor.
Voltage is an electrical force or pressure that causes current to flow in a circuit. It is an additive in a series circuit.
In a series circuit the current flow in each element is equal but voltage across the each element is differ. In a parallel circuit the voltage across the each element is equal but current flow in each element is differ.
In a series circuit the total voltage is the sum of the voltage drops across all the component in series. When the voltage drops across each the individual components are added up, they will equal the supply (or applied) voltage.
voltage is devided only in series circuit and is the same at the parallel circuit
In this case current flows from a high voltage to a lower voltage in a circuit.
well current in a series circuit wont change so a voltage series is also a current series probablyAnswerYour question makes little sense. Applying a voltage across a series circuit results in current through that circuit, so what exactly are you asking?
Current = (Voltage across the circuit) divided by (Total resistance of the circuit). The current is the same at every point in the series circuit.