Physics, asked by unidentifiedsoul007, 9 months ago

From Ohm’s law we get, R = V/I, for a particular conducting wire. How does
resistance (R) of the given wire depend on potential difference(V) or, electric
current ( I ) separately?

Answers

Answered by mathematicalcosmolog
2

Answer:

Resistance of a conductor never ever depends on the potential difference across its ends.

But, resistance of a conductor is inversely proportional to the current flowing through the conductor.

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