Computer Science, asked by swamimallaya47, 1 month ago

explain Kirchoff's law experiment in detail

Answers

Answered by anshudev420
1

Explanation:

Kirchhoff's Current Law (The Junction Rule) states that at any junction (node) of a circuit, the algebraic sum of all the currents is zero (sum of the currents entering the junction equals the sum of the currents leaving the junction). In other words, electric charge is conserved.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Kirchhoff's laws quantify how current flows through a circuit and how voltage varies around a loop in a circuit.

● Kirchhoff's current law (1st Law) states that the current flowing into a node (or a junction) must be equal to the current flowing out of it. This is a consequence of charge conservation.

● Kirchhoff's voltage law (2nd Law) states that in any complete loop within a circuit, the sum of all voltages across components which supply electrical energy (such as cells or generators) must equal the sum of all voltages across the other components in the same loop. This law is a consequence of both charge conservation and the conservation of energy.

Explanation:

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