Physics, asked by jayasreelakshmi7074, 11 months ago

The potential difference between the terminates an electric heater is60v when it draw a current of4afrom the source what current will the heater draw if the potential difference is increased ti120v 0

Answers

Answered by omegads04
0

From the given data,

v₁=60V

v₂= 120V

I₁= 4 Amp

I₂= ?

From Ohms law, V= IR, where R is the resistance of the heate.

Now,

v₂/v₁= I₂/I₁

I₂= (v₂/v₁)×I₁

  = (120/60)× 4

  = 8 Amp

Answered by duragpalsingh
0

Answer:

The current through the heater becomes 8 A.

Explanation:

Given,

The potential difference between the terminals of an electric heater is 60 V.

Current of 4 A is drawn from the source.

To find: What current will the heater draw if the potential difference is increased to 120 V

Solution:

According to Ohm's law, Potential difference is directly proportional to current.

i.e V  \propto  I

or, V = iR

here, V = 60 V and i = 4 A

Substituting the values,

R = V / i = 60 / 4 = 15 Ω

Now, V is increased to 120 V.

Again using ohm's law,

i = V / R = 120 / 15 =  8 A

Therefore, The current through the heater becomes 8 A.

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