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When you add an additional resistor in parallel, there are additional paths which the current can take - making it easier for the current to go from one side to the other.

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Rosamond Weber

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2y ago
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11y ago

Reason on it for a moment. Remember Ohm's law?

I = E/R

That says that for current to increase, resistance must decrease (assuming

voltage stays the same).

Now think of a circuit where a voltage source feeds a resistor. There is current

flow. Now add another resistor in parallel with the first. There is another path

for current to flow, so the total current from the voltage source increases. Ohm's

law says for increased current flow, the resistance must have decreased.

So, when you add resistance in parallel, the total resistance always decreases.

So, if we start with a 10 ohm resistor, then add a 100 ohm resistor, without

doing any math, we know the current will be higher than with just the 10 ohm

resistor, so the total resistance will be less than 10 ohms.

Of course, you could start with the 100 ohm resistor, but once they are in

parallel, the electrons don't care what order they were added, the total

resistance is still less than 10 ohms.

Now, if you add a third resistor, say a 5 ohm, the 10 and 100 will conspire to

add current flow and make the total resistance less than 5 ohms.

The rule holds true every time!

====

The total resistance is the total 'difficulty' of getting from point-A to point-B ...

the total level of effort, fatigue, and frustration you have to go through in order

to jump across ... which is actually a pretty good representation of the energy

that the electrons lose in traversing the circuit.

Now consider:

Several roads in parallel ... connecting the same two towns ... can always carry

more traffic than the widest single road in the group can.

Analogies are usually pretty poor explanations, but to me, this one is right on.

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14y ago

If you put a voltage across a resistor you get a certain current. If you put the same voltage across two identical resistors you will get twice as much current, simply because you have two resistors.

Here are some some equations.

For a single resistor R₁

V₀= R₁*I₁

For two identical resistors the equation will eventually take the form

V₀= R₀*I₀

Where I₀ and R₀ is the new current and new resistance.

If you have two identical resistors in parallel then you have twice the current.

I₀ = I₁ + I₁

or

I₀ = 2*I₁

or

I₁ =½I₀

If we take

V₀= R₁*I₁

and substitude..

V₀= R₁*½I₀

or

V₀= ½R₁*I₀

Now compare that to the equation

V₀= R₀*I₀

and you can see how...

R₀= ½R₁

so the resistance is half.

Remember resistance is simply a number that relates current to voltage and nothing more.

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12y ago

Without getting into the mathematics of it, the best way to look at parallel resistors is that each resistor provides an additional path for current to flow. Because of this, the equivalent resistance CANNOT be higher than the lowest value resistor in the parallel combination. And since each additional resistor provides an alternate path for more current to flow than would flow through the smallest value resistor, the equivalent resistance will ALWAYS be lower than the value of the lowest resistor.

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11y ago

That's true only in a parallel circuit, and it's fairly easy to understand

with the help of a simple analogy:

Several roads in parallel ... connecting the same two towns ... can always

carry more traffic than the widest single road in the group can.

===================================

Similarly, the total resistance of a series circuit is always higher than the

highest resistor in the circuit.

Several roads in series ... all the pieces of road you have to drive through to

get from one town to another ... are always harder to get through altogether

than the narrowest, bumpiest single piece of road in the string is.

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Q: Why is the equivalent resistance of a parallel circuit smaller than any of the individual resistance in the connection?
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What is the universal equation for resistance in a parallel circuit?

Total equivalent resistance = reciprocal of (sum of reciprocals of each individual resistance)


To connect a pair of resistors so that their equivalent resistance is greater than the resistance of either one should you connect them in series or in parallel?

When many resistances are connected in series, the equivalent resistance is greater than the greatest single resistance. When many resistances are connected in parallel, the equivalent resistance is less than the smallest single resistance.


When the resistor removed from a parallel connection of the circuit whether the resistance increase or decrease?

if we remove a resistor from the parallel connection the effective resistance value will be increased.


The total resistance in a parallel circuit is the smallest resistor in the circuit?

No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.


Why is resistance less when resistors are join in parallel?

What do you mean? In a parallel circuit, the combined (or effective) resistance is less than any individual resistance.

Related questions

What is a parallel universe what is a parallel universe?

Total equivalent resistance = reciprocal of (sum of reciprocals of each individual resistance)


What is the universal equation for resistance in a parallel circuit?

Total equivalent resistance = reciprocal of (sum of reciprocals of each individual resistance)


Is the sum of the resistance in a parallel circuit always excessds the total resistance in a circuit?

Not sure what you mean. The equivalent (total) resistance in a parallel circuit is less than any individual resistance.


Three 8.0-W resistors are connected in series What is their equivalent resistance?

Three 8.0-W resistors are connected in parallel. What is their equivalent resistance?


What is the equivalent resistance through the entire circuit?

The equivalent resistance is the overall effect all of the resistances in a circuit has. Put another way, it is the value a single resistor in a circuit would have to be in order to have the same effect as all of the resistors resistors combined in a given circuit.


To connect a pair of resistors so that their equivalent resistance is greater than the resistance of either one should you connect them in series or in parallel?

When many resistances are connected in series, the equivalent resistance is greater than the greatest single resistance. When many resistances are connected in parallel, the equivalent resistance is less than the smallest single resistance.


What is the ratio of equivalent resistance of series and parallel combination of n equal resistance to the equivalent resistance on parallel combination?

1


When the resistor removed from a parallel connection of the circuit whether the resistance increase or decrease?

if we remove a resistor from the parallel connection the effective resistance value will be increased.


Is resistance additive in a series circuit?

No. The reciprocal is additive. The formula for the equivalent resistance, in parallel, is 1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3... where R is the total equivalent resistance, and R1, etc. are the individual resistances in parallel. Note that the equilalent resistance will be less than any of the individual resistances.


The total resistance in a parallel circuit is the smallest resistor in the circuit?

No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.No, it is less. Use the formula:1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3...Where R is the total (equivalent) resistance for the parallel circuit,and R1, R2, etc. are the individual resistance.


What happens to the resistance of the circuit when you add resistances in parallel?

Adding a resistance in parallel to another resistance will reduce the equivalent resistance. Parallel Equation: R1 = 10Ω R2 = 20Ω Req = R1R2/(R1+R2) = (1/R1+1/R2)-1 Req = 10•20/(10+20) = 6.67Ω


What is the formula for calculating the equivalent resistance of a series circuit?

Equivalent resistance of a series circuit is the sum of the resistance of all appliances. The formula is R=R1+R2+... where R is equivalent resistance, R1, R2 and so on is the resistance of the individual appliances.