Since power is voltage times amperes, in order to double the power while voltage remains the same, you must double the current - 4 amps in this case.
Current increases if the voltage remains constant.
Voltage remains constant; current increases.
The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
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
Current will increase
As long as the voltage between the ends of the circuit remains constant, the current through the circuit is inversely proportional to the total effective resistance of the circuit.
Voltage attempts to make a current flow, and current will flow if the circuit is complete. It is possible to have voltage without current, but current cannot flow without voltage. The answer is "yes",voltage remains the same as current moves through the circuit.As the voltage remains constant, current increases in the circuit.
A: Current remains the same on a series circuit. A: Current will divide on a parallel circuit for each branch according to the existing resistance
The resistance is decreasing
Here is the formula you use. I = E/R. I = amperage, E = volts, R = resistance in ohms.