iampaul said:
In our experiment we measured the forward resistance of a diode using a multimeter. We used that value and the voltage across the diode to compute the current passing through the diode.
Is that value really constant??
As others said, it's not constant. But the ohmmeter reading
is telling you the ratio of voltage/current through the diode||voltmeter combination, at whatever voltage and current happen to be provided by the ohmmeter.
Your calculation of current
might be correct, it depends whether these two conditions are being met:
1. You measured the diode voltage with a separate meter,
at the same time you were measuring resistance with the first meter.
2. The resistance of the 2nd meter, when measuring voltage, is a lot higher than the resistance reading of the 1st meter. You can measure the resistance of the 2nd meter in voltage mode using the first meter, without the diode, and see what you get. 10 MΩ is fairly typical of a digital meter, while an analog meter could be in the ballpark of 100 kΩ.
(Even if condition #2 isn't met, it might be possible to get the diode current if you provide us with your actual readings.)