Physics, asked by gyanjis, 8 months ago

Hhe guys plz state ohms law in shortform dont spam ​

Answers

Answered by himanibanga170
2

Ohm's law has sometimes been stated as, "for a conductor in a given state, the electromotive force is proportional to the current produced." That is, that the resistance, the ratio of the applied electromotive force (or voltage) to the current, "does not vary with the current strength ."

hope it will help you

and u r that gyanji who deleted all my question &answers u deleted my correct answer and my relevant question also

r u mad..........

Answered by VivekGangave
3

Answer:

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same.

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same. V directly proportional I

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same. V directly proportional Ior V/I = constant

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same. V directly proportional Ior V/I = constant = R

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same. V directly proportional Ior V/I = constant = Ror V = IR

Ohm law states that the potential difference V across the ends of a given conductor in an electric circuit is directly proportional to the current flowing through it,provided its temperature remains same. V directly proportional Ior V/I = constant = Ror V = IRHope it will help u!

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