What is Difference between parallel and series resistor circuit ?
Answers
Answered by
2
Answer:
In a series circuit, the sum of the voltages consumed by each individual resistance is equal to the source voltage. Components connected in parallel are connected along multiple paths so that the current can split up; the same voltage is applied to each component.
Please plz plz plz Mark me as brainliest
And follow me
Answered by
3
- The potential difference across each resistor is the same and is equal to the applied potential difference.
- The current through each resistor is inversely proportional to resistance of that resistor.
- Total current through The parallel combination is the sum of individual current through various resistor.
- The reciprocal of the total resistance of The parallel combination is equal to the sum of reciprocal of individual resistance.
- The total resistance in parallel combination is less than the least resistance used in circuit.
- The current is same in every register because there is single path along which current can flow.
- The current in the circuit is independent of the relative positions of various resistors in the series.
- The voltage across any resistor is directly proportional to the resistance of the resistor.
- The total resistance of the circuit is equal to the sum of the individual resistances plus the internal resistance of a cell if any.
- The total resistance in the series circuit is obviously more than the greater resistance in the circuit.
Similar questions