If you add one extra bulb and the voltage remains constant, then you have doubled the current drained from the regulator.
12 Volt and One 12 Watt light bulb drains 1 Ampere Current.
12 Volt and Two 12 Watt light bulbs drains 2 Ampere Current.
However:
If having a 24 volt power source and you add two 12 Volt 12 Watt in serial, then you still only drain 1 Ampere Current.
NOTE:
Wattage and Voltage of bulbs may be different even if the sockets are the same.
Lower voltage on the bulb will increase the current drain, if voltage is a lot lower it might cause the circuit delivering voltage to burn out or blow a fuse. It can also quickly burn the bulb, sometimes in a fraction of a second.
It will however do little damage to add a bulb with higher voltage than the circuit is designed for. You will then only observe that you do not get the light you might hope for.
Total Current/Ampere= Combined Wattage divided by Voltage
Total Wattage = Combined Current or Ampere multiplied by Voltage.
In simpler words:
If you double the bulbs, twice the current is drained from the battery
In the circuit where the DC motor is added, it was not specified whether the motor was added in series or in parallel to circuit elements. If it was added in series, it will increase circuit resistance and it will cause circuit current to go down. In parallel, the motor will reduce total circuit resistance, and circuit current will increase.
As more light bulbs are added in a series circuit, the effective resistance of the circuit increases. That causes the current leaving the source to decrease.
The reduction of voltage or the increase of resistance will reduce the current in a circuit.
The total resistance of the circuit increases. hence the new resistance after adding the resistance will be new resistance = old resistance + added Resistance There is a small mistake in the question. The second word is 'changes' not 'charges'
Simply put, the purpose of a resistor is to 'resist' the flow of current. Ohm's Law tells us that for a given voltage, the larger the resistance, or value of that resistor, the lower the current that will flow. Ohm's Law states that I (current) = E (voltage) / R (resistance) - where current is measured in amps, voltage is measured in volts and resistance is measured in ohms.
becase the electricity is taken by both bulbs and it is divided
The total current in the circuit will decrease.
In the circuit where the DC motor is added, it was not specified whether the motor was added in series or in parallel to circuit elements. If it was added in series, it will increase circuit resistance and it will cause circuit current to go down. In parallel, the motor will reduce total circuit resistance, and circuit current will increase.
Added resistance in a circuit will decrease the current flowing through the circuit, resulting in a decrease in the brightness of the bulb. This is because the bulb's brightness is directly proportional to the current passing through it. More resistance means less current, which leads to reduced brightness.
extra resistance is added in order to decrease starting current and improve starting torque
Just as the name of the component implies, electrical current gets resisted and therefore it diminishes unless an equally, larger voltage difference in that section of the circuit is applied. V=IR Current is inversely proportional to Resistance (when one goes UP, the other goes DOWN) Voltage is directly proportional to Resistance
Current will be decreased because of the resistance of the ammeter added to the circuit's resistance. In other words total resistance increases.
Adding more branches to a parallel circuit decreases the overall resistance of the circuit. This leads to an increase in the total current flowing through the circuit as each branch provides an additional pathway for the current to flow. This results in a decrease in the total resistance and an increase in the overall current of the circuit.
A: If put in series current will decrease if put in parallel current will increase assuming the input voltage remains the same
As more light bulbs are added in a series circuit, the effective resistance of the circuit increases. That causes the current leaving the source to decrease.
Depends on the device. If it is a resistor and you have a fixed voltage then the circuit will obey Ohms law. Voltage = Current x Resistance. So if R increases by adding more resistors in series and the voltage is constant, the current will decrease.
When you have multiple loads in a series, the resistance of the loads is added together allowing very little current to flow through the circuit to power any of the loads, making for a low amperage circuit. If you have your loads in parellel, the resistance of the loads in the circuit is subtracted which allows more current to flow, making for a high amperage circuit.