Science, asked by hameedabdulabc1996, 1 year ago

current splits at the junction

Answers

Answered by aman190k
0
The key rule you need here is Kirchoff's current law:

The sum of currents flowing into a node is equal to the sum of currents flowing out of a node (or, equivalently, all currents at a node sum to zero).

So yes,current does split at a junction(unless one branch has zero or infinite impedance!).
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