Explain kirchoff's laws
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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 current flowing into a node (or a junction) must be equal to current flowing out of it. This is a consequence of charge conservation.
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• Kirchhoff's Laws are: A hot solid, liquid or gas, under high pressure, gives off a continuous spectrum. A hot gas under low pressure produces a bright-line or emission line spectrum. A dark line or absorption line spectrum is seen when a source of a continuous spectrum is viewed behind a cool gas under pressure.
• The principle of this law is to conserve the electric charge. The law states that the amount of current flowing into a node is equal to the sum of currents flowing out of it. The law states that the sum of voltages is in a closed-loop is zero.
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