Ohm's law says the opposite.
Ohm's Law says that Voltage = Current x Resistance (Load). Therefore Current = Voltage / Resistance and as resistance decreases current increases and as resistance increases current decreases.
Ohm's law says Voltage = Current x Resistance. As voltage increases, currrent increases proportionally with a fixed load.
Both technicians are right, and both technicians are wrong, because not enough information is present in the question, nor in their statements. Given constant impedance, current should decrease as voltage decreases, while given constant power, current should increase as voltage decreases.
Ohm's Law says Voltage = Current x Resistance and written as V = I x R. So as R increases for a fixed V then current will decrease proportionally.
This question makes no sense as written. However, maybe it will help to know that for a given load if you increase voltage the current increases proportionally and if you decrease the voltage the current decreases proportionally. Ohm's Law says Voltage = Current x Resistance.
If the pitch increases from A440 to A880, the wavelength of the sound decreases by half. This is because pitch and wavelength are inversely proportional - as pitch increases, wavelength decreases.
It is not generally true that current increases when the voltage decreases. Ohms law for a simple resistor says that current is proportional to voltage. However an electric motor supplying a constant mechanical load power will readjust to a lower supply voltage by drawing more current, although if the voltage is progressively reduced the motor would stall. Switch-mode power supplies also tend to draw a constant power from the supply when the input voltage changes.
Ohms Law says Voltage = Current x Resistance. Hence if voltage rises, so will current.
No. V =Voltage, I =current, and R =resistancein the simple equation: V=I*R. As well, V/I=R, and. V/R=Iso Current is voltage divided by resistance
Arithmetic and basis algebra are good skills to have. For example, Ohm's Law says Voltage = Current x Resistance. If you know Resistance and Voltage and want to solve for current you need to know that Current = Voltage / Resistance.
German physict Georg Ohm
current change with resistance as, anything which opposes flow of current is called resistor is circuit, now we use battery to give potential across the circuit, potential just ensure the continuous flow of charge from higher to lower potential (water flows from high PE to low PE), while resistance opposes the flow of charge and thereby effecting the value of current, it's practically found that more is the resistance, less is the current flowing through resistance, this is indirectly observed from ohm law V=IR.