Illogical question captain!!
The current is greater than or equal to (6) divided by (the effective resistance of the circuit).
No, the current is equal to the power (watts) divided by the voltage, based on the formula: current = power / voltage. Voltage divided by watts does not equal current.
There is an electronic formula voltage/resistance = current If you translate this into plumbing terms voltage would equal water pressure resistance would equal pipes and valves and the current would equal the flow rate. If you start closing a valve it increases resistance and lowers the current flow
If resistance increases and voltage stays the same, then current decreases. Ohm's Law: Current equals Voltage divided by Resistance.
No. Voltage divided by resistance is equal to current.
In the field of volt physics, voltage and electric current are directly related. Voltage is the force that pushes electric current through a circuit. The higher the voltage, the greater the potential for electric current to flow. This relationship is described by Ohm's Law, which states that current (I) is equal to voltage (V) divided by resistance (R), or I V/R.
Voltage is equal to the Current multiplied by the Resistance.Without changing the resistance, increasing the applied voltage in a circuit will increase current flow. There is a simple, direct relationship between voltage and current. Double the voltage, twice the current will flow. Triple the voltage, and the current will triple. As voltage (E) equals current (I) times resistance (R), when resistance is fixed, what happens to voltage will happen to current.
Power, in 'watts'.
Then the voltage in will equal the voltage out. The purpose of a resistor is to reduce the amount of electrical flow of current. You 'short out' the supply and blow a fuse/circuit breaker.
Yes and no. Voltage is directly proportional to current from Ohm's Law (V=IR.) Thus, when voltage increases, so does current. However, voltage can be inversely proportional to current in some situations. This can be seen in a transformer, where current and voltage are inversely proportional due to the law of conservation of energy, in which P(in) must equal P(out). Thus, a greater input voltage leads to a small output current.
When a dc supply is connected to a resistor, current flows. The current in amps is equal to the supply voltage divided by the resistance in ohms. The power used is the voltage times the current, and that appears as heat in the resistor, which might become hot to touch.
In a series circuit the current flow in each element is equal but voltage across the each element is differ. In a parallel circuit the voltage across the each element is equal but current flow in each element is differ.