Potential difference and ohms law

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a circuit problem involving a 3 Ohm and a 1.5 Ohm resistor in parallel, connected in series with a 4 Ohm resistor and a 10 V emf source. Participants are attempting to determine the potential difference across the 3 Ohm resistor.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss calculating equivalent resistance for resistors in parallel and series, with varying interpretations of the total resistance and current. Questions arise regarding the voltage drop across the resistors and the application of Ohm's law.

Discussion Status

There are multiple interpretations of the equivalent resistance and the resulting current. Some participants suggest different methods for calculating voltage drops, while others express confusion about their calculations. No consensus has been reached, and the discussion continues to explore the implications of the differing approaches.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the constraints of a homework problem, which may limit the information available for discussion. There is an emphasis on understanding the behavior of resistors in parallel and series configurations.

nautica
A 3Ohm and a 1.5 ohm resistor are wired in paralles and the combination is wired in series to a 4 ohm resistor and a 10 V emf device. The potential difference on across the 3 ohm resistor is?

I reduced the 2 in parrallel to 1.875 ohms and then addes the 4 ohm, which gave me a total resistance of 5.875 ohms. Then measured the current using ohms law, which gave me 1.7 amps. Then multiplied that times the 3 ohms to get 5.1 V.

But that is not one of the answer choices, where did I go wrong.

these are the choices: 2V,6V,8V,10V,12V

Thanks
Nautica
 
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Wouldn't the equivalent resistance be 1? making the total resistance 5 ohms? Then you'd have a (10/5)*1 volt drop across the 2 resistors in parallel and a (10/5)*4 volt drop across the 4 ohm resistor.

Look at the resistors in parallel again:

[tex]R_{eq} = \left(\frac 1 3 + \frac 1 {1.5} \right)^{-1} = \left(\frac{1+2}{3}\right)^{-1} = 1[/tex]
 
nice, maybe I need to go back to 3rd grade math.
 
I am still not coming up with the answer.

If the total resistance is the 1 ohm, which i reduced, plus the 4 ohm in series. That gives me a total resistance of 5 ohms. Then I plug that into ohms law, which is V=IR and it gives me a total current of 2 amps.

To find the potential difference on the 3 ohm, I would have to cut the current in half, which is 1 and then use ohms law, which is V=IR so 1 x 3, which gives me 3, but that is wrong.

Nautica
 
Originally posted by nautica
A 3Ohm and a 1.5 ohm resistor are wired in paralles and the combination is wired in series to a 4 ohm resistor and a 10 V emf device. The potential difference on across the 3 ohm resistor is?

I'm getting the answer as being 2V


Resistance of parallel things

[tex]R = (3^-^1 + 1.5^-^1)^-^1[/tex]

[tex]R = 1 \Omega[/tex]

resistance total

R = 1 + 4
R = 5[tex]\Omega[/tex]

total current:

[tex]I = \frac{V}{R}[/tex]

[tex]I = \frac{10}{5}[/tex]

I = 2A

voltage drop over the 4[tex]\Omega[/tex] resistor:
V = IR
V = (2)(4)
V = 8V

voltage remaining:
V = 10 - 8
V = 2V
 
So how is that split between the remaining 3 and 1.5 ohm on the parrallel
 
It isn't. When dealing with a parallel, the voltage is the same in each path. That's why hooking lightbulbs in parallel makes power consumption much higher than hooking them in series.
 

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