R=1/(1/ R1 +1/ R2 +1/ R3 +.........) Where R is the total external resistance(effective resistance) in an electric circuit.
Not sure what you mean. The equivalent (total) resistance in a parallel circuit is less than any individual resistance.
In principle, it is infinite. I have not connected a parallel circuit in ages.
It does not contain unidirectional outputAnswerA purely resistive circuit is an 'ideal' circuit that contains resistance, but not inductance or capacitance.
If additional resistance is connected in parallel with a circuit the supply voltage will decrease?
No, series parallel, as it implies has components of the circuit configured in both series and parallel. This is typically done to achieve a desired resistance in the circuit. A parallel circuit is a circuit that only has the components hooked in parallel, which would result in a lower total resistance in the circuit than if the components were hooked up in a series parallel configuration.
in a parallel circuit resistance decreases increasing the current.
A resistance 'network' consists of a number of resistors connected together in series, or in parallel, or in series-parallel, or as a complex circuit. A 'complex' circuit is one that is not series, parallel, or series-parallel.
What do you mean by a 'parallel delta' circuit -is there such a connection.
Yes, the current split in parallel circuits does affect the overall resistance in the circuit. In a parallel circuit, the total resistance decreases as more branches are added because the current has multiple paths to flow through, reducing the overall resistance.
Parallel circuits have a higher current and a lower resistance.
six
You add up the currents in each branch. The current in each branch is just (voltage acrossd the parallel circuit)/(resistance of that branch) . ==================================== If you'd rather do it the more elegant way, then . . . -- Write down the reciprocal of the resistance of each branch. -- Add up the reciprocals. -- Take the reciprocal of the sum. The number you have now is the 'effective' resistance of the parallel circuit ... the single resistance that it looks like electrically. -- The total current through the parallel circuit is (voltage acrossd the parallel circuit)/(effective resistace of the parallel circuit) .