Physics, asked by sohanlalgoel1976, 8 months ago

what is 4 differnce between parallel and series combination

Answers

Answered by seanpatel129
0

Answer:

Explanation:

parallel combination: in this 2 or more resistors are connected in parallel to each other and the resistance is given by; Rp=1/R1+1/R2+...

in parallel combination voltage remains same in every resistor but current changes in each resistor

if one device fails in parallel combination then the other devices do not stop working

series combination: in this 2 or more resistors are connected in series and the resistance is given by;Rs=R1+R2+...

in series combination the current in each resistor resistor remains same but the voltage breaks up

if one device fails or stops working in series combination then all other devices stop working

Answered by amisharp15
0

Answer:

A circuit is said to be connected in series when the same current flows through all the components in the circuit.

A circuit is said to be parallel when the electric current has multiple paths to flow through.

Explanation:

SERIES:

  • The same amount of current flows through all the components.
  • When resistors are put in a circuit, the voltage across each resistor is different even though the current flow is the same through all of them.
  • If one component breaks down, the whole circuit will burn out.
  • If V_{t} it total voltage then it is equal to V1+V2+V3

PARALLEL:

  • The current flowing through each components combines to form the current flow through the source.
  • When resistors are put in a circuit, the voltage across each resistor is different even though the current flow is the same through all of them. When resistors are put in this circuit, the voltage across each of the resistors is the same. And even the polarities are the same
  • Other components will function even if one component breaks down, each has its own independent circuit
  • If V_{t} it total voltage then it is equal to V1=V2=V3
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