Physics, asked by shreyanshyadav28, 10 months ago

state ohm's law ? how can it be verfied experimentally ? does it hold good under all conditions ? comment .​

Answers

Answered by AfreenMohammedi
12

Hey Buddy..

Answer:

Answer :

According to Ohm’s law:

The electrical current flowing through a conductor is directly proportional to the potential difference across its ends providing the temperature remains same.

R ×V

R= V/I

R is resistance of conductor

V is potential difference

I is current

It can be verified experimentally by following:

1. Set up an electrical circuit consisting of nichrome wire of length ×Y say 0.5m , an ammeter, a voltmeter and four cells of 1.5 V each .

2. Firstly, use one cell as source in the circuit. Note the current in the ammeter and voltmeter reading across the nichrome ×Y in the circuit.

3. Connect two cells in the circuit and note down the reading from the given circuit for the current and potential difference.

4. Repeat the same experiment for three cells and then four cells and note down the reading from Ammeter and Voltmeter.

5. Calculate the value of ratio to each pair of potential difference V and current I.

It is observed that the value of V/I is approximately same for each case and V-I graph obtained is a straight line which verifies Ohm’s law.

No, it doesn’t hold good under all conditions because the value of current is different for different components. Certain components offer an easy path for flow of resistance while others resists the flow.

Hope this helps u dude ✌

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shreyanshyadav28: too long
AfreenMohammedi: okay
Dhruvghai123: yes
shreyanshyadav28: but it help me lot. so thankful to u
AfreenMohammedi: ur welcome
Answered by Dhruvghai123
1

Answer:

ohms law

Explanation:

v=IR

no,it holds under any condition.for eg if there is change in temp, resistance Also increases but current and potential difference remains constant

Experimental verification:

we know

p.d is directly proportional to the current

v is directly proportional to I

therefore, value ofV÷I remains always constant.

we need to take a circuit with Annette and a voltmeter we need to campsite ther ratios by changing the voltage.that always remain constant.

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