An open circuit or a short-circuit (if that circuit is complete).
As load is conected in circuit , so thre is no open circuit therefore there would not be any open circuit voltage.
For a d.c. circuit, you divide its supply voltage by the resistance of its load. For an a.c. circuit, you divide its supply voltage by the impedance of its load.
A load not connected to ground but connected in a feedback circuit is floating load
The circuit will become an open circuit.
If you are just using the load to pull a small amount of current, then yes a electronic circuit can be used for that. If you want a resistive load to measure voltage drop or something similar, then no an electronic circuit will usually not work for that.
The load of a flashlight is the bulb.
A motor in a circuit is classed as the circuit's load.
A circuit with a separate path for each load is a dedicated circuit. <<>> A circuit with a separate path for each load is a parallel circuit.
No. No load and short circuit is not similar. No load can be 1) Either open circuit i.e. Only Potential is available and load is not connected 2) Load (i.e. motor etc ) is connected but not working with full load or full capacity. In this case the current will flow through the circuit depending on the load. It means No load condition is a condition where no current or a small ( relative / comparative term) current is flowing through the circuit. In Short circuit the load side resistance/ impedance become so less that very high amount of current is passing through circuit.( The protection is therefor required for any circuit) No load and and short circuit is not similar. Thanks
A load increases the flow of electrical current in a series circuit. No load, no flow.
As load is conected in circuit , so thre is no open circuit therefore there would not be any open circuit voltage.
The bulb is the load of the circuit, without it you have a short circuit.
this is a circuit in which the switch is located before the load in the circuit
The load that is connected in a circuit is what does the work in the circuit.
the electrical circuit, load, conductor, open circuit, switch,
For a d.c. circuit, you divide its supply voltage by the resistance of its load. For an a.c. circuit, you divide its supply voltage by the impedance of its load.
The load of a flashlight is the bulb.