Current goes down with an increase in resistance.
In that case, the current will also be doubled. This follows from Ohm's Law (current = voltage / resitance)
increases
Work it out yourself -the equation is: voltage = current x resistance.
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.
If resistance increases and voltage stays the same, then current decreases. Ohm's Law: Current equals Voltage divided by Resistance.
If the potential increase and resitance remain the same ,the current will encrease
length of the wire effects the resitance
Ohm's law states that the current is directly proportional to the applied EMF (voltage) and inversely proportional to the resistance of the circuit. I = E/R.
This is called a conductor.
v=ir .005X8.2=.0041
In that case, the current will also be doubled. This follows from Ohm's Law (current = voltage / resitance)
resitance is inversly proportional to current when (v) is kept constant <><><><><> Because resistance is a function of temperature.
3 Ampere
An ohmmeter works by applying a voltage, and measuring the corresponding current. This is an application of Ohm's law: resitance = voltage / current.
Ohm'sLaw states Voltage = Current x Resistance. Therefore, for the same voltage if you have 2 x R, you must have 1/2 x Current to get the same voltage.
The wind IS the current in this case.
The only way current can increase while resistance in a circuit increases is if voltage, which is the force that causes electric current, increases.