Science, asked by amritpal8806, 11 months ago

what is the voltage needed to produce a hundred ampere intensity with the resistance 50 ohm​

Answers

Answered by vijaykumar50763
0

Explanation:

ped across a fixed resistance of one ohm with a current of one ampere flowing through it.

In other words, 1 Volt equals 1 Ampere times 1 Ohm, or commonly V = I*R.

Ohm’s Law states that for a linear circuit the current flowing through it is proportional to the potential difference across it so the greater the potential difference across any two points the bigger will be the current flowing through it.

For example, if the voltage at one side of a 10Ω resistor measures 8V and at the other side of the resistor it measures 5V, then the potential difference across the resistor would be 3V ( 8 – 5 ) causing a current of 0.3A to flow.

If however, the voltage on one side was increased from 8V to say 40V, the potential difference across the resistor would now be 40V – 5V = 35V causing a current of 3.5A to flow. The voltage at any point in a circuit is always measured with respect to a common point, generally 0V.

For electrical circuits, the earth or ground potential is usually taken to be at zero volts ( 0V ) and everything is referenced to that common point in a circuit.

Answered by AkanshaPandey
0

Explanation:

voltage=current * resistance

V=I*R

HERE,

I = 100 AMPERE

RESISTANCE =50 OHM

VOLTAGE = 100*50 VOLT

VOLTAGE = 5000 VOLT

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