Math, asked by rahimjiwa578, 9 months ago

 If voltage decrease (but resistance stays the same), current will​

Answers

Answered by abhinand81
0

Step-by-step explanation:

Ohm's law states that the electrical current (I) flowing in an circuit is proportional to the voltage (V) and inversely proportional to the resistance (R). Therefore, if the voltage is increased, the current will increase provided the resistance of the circuit does not change.

Answered by HA7SH
20

Step-by-step explanation:

By Ohm’s law, V = IR. Current will decrease when voltage decrease, and will do so by a constant proportion.

To better understand, imagine that voltage is the pressure on a water pipeline, while resistance is the diammeter of that pipeline. The more pressure you have (voltage), the higher the amount of water flowing through the pipe during any given amount of time (current). And if water’s pressure drops, by keeping constant the pipeline diammeter (resistance), then water current will drop too.

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