A: No matter how many resistor of different value are inserted the current will remain the same for each. The voltage drop will vary with the difference in resistors and i a parallel path is found along the way the current will divide according to the resistors values
No
Current
Current flow remains the same throughout the circuit.
The time constant of an RL series circuit is calculated using the formular: time constant=L/R
by adding the the resistances in series the total resistance of the circuit increses and thus the crunt flowing in the circuit decrese. Ans 2 . the current in series circuit of constant resistance will always be the same . It will not effect the current .
V = IR Where, V = voltage I = current R = resistance Thus if resistance is increased with constant voltage current will decrease
it remains same i=voltage/total resistance
In a series circuit the current remains constant at any point while the voltage drops across each resistive element.
Normally, but if the circuit has capacitors this is not necessarily true.Another viewpoint:No. The current doesn't have to be constant in a series circuit, It can grow, shrink,wax, wane, switch on, switch off, or wander randomly about. But whatever it is,it must be the same at all points in the series circuit.
Ohm's Law answers your question. Voltage = Current x Resistance. In a series circuit you are in effect adding resistance. If the Voltage remains constant then the answer is obvious looking at the equation above.
Ohm's Law answers your question. Voltage = Current x Resistance. In a series circuit you are in effect adding resistance. If the Voltage remains constant then the answer is obvious looking at the equation above.
Ohm's Law answers your question. Voltage = Current x Resistance. In a series circuit you are in effect adding resistance. If the Voltage remains constant then the answer is obvious looking at the equation above.
Current flow remains the same throughout the circuit.
The time constant of an RL series circuit is calculated using the formular: time constant=L/R
The resistance remains constant. The voltage would change, in accordance with Ohms' law, with a change in current.
current
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
Nothing about a series circuit is necessarily constant. You may be thinking of the current, which is the same number at any point in a series circuit. That doesn't mean that it can't change. But if it does change, it'll change at every point, and still be the same number everywhere in the series circuit.