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Resistances! |
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| May31-07, 02:36 AM | #1 |
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Resistances!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
Calculate the effective resistance betwen A and B! 3. The attempt at a solution 1/ER=(1/2R)+(1/5R)+(1/R) ER=10R/17 |
| May31-07, 12:04 PM | #2 |
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There are a couple of shorts in that diagram. So...what's the path of *least* resistance between A and B?
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| May31-07, 01:34 PM | #3 |
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Are you familar with transformations with resistor/impedance networks? This looks to be be one of those.
I recommend drawing the circuit another way. |
| Jun1-07, 02:38 AM | #4 |
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Resistances! |
| Jun1-07, 09:48 AM | #5 |
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I was thinking star-delta transformations, but I've just moved them around again and the circuit is simpler than I though ... doh!
Where do you get 5R from? |
| Jun2-07, 12:02 AM | #6 |
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| Jun2-07, 05:52 AM | #7 |
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Try moving the left resistor above the middle resistor, and the right resistor at the bottom. Keep the wires connected as they are, and see what the circuit looks like.
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| Jun2-07, 02:42 PM | #8 |
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Although I didn't follow those exact directions, I did redraw the circuit using my own methods and arrived at the result that I think you were hinting at, Delta, which is that the three resistors are in parallel. The only thing that confuses me is that if you draw them this way, the topology really seems to downplay the fact that it is possible for current to travel from A to B through all three resistors, a fact that I usually don't consider when looking at resistors in parallel, whereas the topology in the OP's diagram really emphasizes this point. That's where he got 5R from.
EDIT: Nevermind. I realize what the mistake is. If there is a current, then the electric potential at A is higher than at B (or vice versa), which means the path through all three resistors is not valid, because the current would be flowing from a lower potential to a higher one if it went through the middle resistor after having gone through the leftmost one. This is much much clearer in the redrawn topology, in which you can actually see that the current would have to "double back on itself" by going down one branch from A to B and then back up another from B to A, in order to take this 5R path. Therefore, the 5R path is not valid, and there are only three parallel routes (one through each resistor). |
| Jun3-07, 11:44 AM | #9 |
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i cant understand what you all mean to say. Will you please be so good to draw the simplified diagram in paint for me? Please.
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| Jun3-07, 12:19 PM | #10 |
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| Jun5-07, 04:02 AM | #11 |
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1. through 2R and then through short circuit to B 2. through short circuit and the via R to B 3. via all three resistances without using any short circuits |
| Jun5-07, 12:25 PM | #12 |
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![]() ![]() Everything circled in red is at the same potential as point B, and therefore is, in a sense, electrical point B. Likewise for everything circled in blue being A electrically. As a result, can you see that if current passes through the leftmost 2R resistor, it has already travelled from A to B in the sense of having lost potential equivalent to the voltage between A and B? Now for the point all of this was building up to: if current goes through the left resistor, and then the middle one, then it will have gone from A, to B, and then back to A again! Clearly this won't happen in practice: either A or B will be at a higher potential if current is to flow. As a result, the path passing through all three resistors is not valid, for it goes from A to B to A to B. This is what I was trying to explain in my edit to post #8, but redrawing the circuit makes this point really clear. |
| Jun5-07, 01:03 PM | #13 |
| Jun5-07, 01:50 PM | #14 |
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Thanks a lot sir for giving your precious time to that. I had been trying to solve this for over a week now. Thanks once again for the help. Physics really sems interesting!!!!!!!!! |
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