Electricity- 2 objects of different power on same battery.

AI Thread Summary
In the discussion about connecting bulbs of different power to the same 1.5-volt battery, it is clarified that a bulb with lower resistance will draw more current, leading to quicker battery drainage. The power consumed by the bulb is determined by the formula P=VI, where power is inversely proportional to resistance. Thus, a bulb designed for higher power will require more current to maintain the same voltage, resulting in faster depletion of the battery's energy. Additionally, the internal resistance of the battery can cause a slight voltage drop, further affecting performance. Overall, the greater current drawn by the higher power bulb contributes to quicker battery drain despite both bulbs being connected to the same voltage source.
hasankamal007
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Guess its pretty simple-


Case1-
I connect a bulb of less power to a battery of voltage, say 1.5volts.

Case2-
I connect a bulb of more power to another battery of same voltage, say 1.5volts.

What is difference seen in the two cases? :
• will the battery drainout quicker in case2? But why, if it applies same voltage of 1.5 volts in both cases.
• or does a battery simply applies relatively more voltage in case2?
• or anything else?

Please clarify. Thanks a lot!
 
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Bulb 2 will have a lower resistance (if designed for the same voltage) and therefore drain battery 2 quicker.

If you consider the internal resistance of the battery, the voltage at bulb 2 will be a bit lower (as a higher voltage drops occurs in the battery).
 
Ok that's what I had accepted. But an you answer why it'll drain quicker in case 2? even If it holds same voltage 1.5 in both cases?
Maybe because the battery uses more of its chemicals to maintain same voltage?
(mfb thanks for replying).
 
mfb is right. Maybe it needs a bit more explanation? Voltage is energy per charge (since we are ignoring the effect of magnetic fields). And we can also say that current I is the charge going through per second. So current times voltage is the energy lost per second (i.e. the power). This gives us: P=VI We also know for ohmic resistors that V=IR And rearranging these two equations gives:
P= \frac{V^2}{R}
So the power used is inversely proportional to the resistance (since voltage is the same in both cases). To put all this into an intuitive explanation: A greater current means more power because more charge carriers are moving through the potential difference. And to get a greater current, we can use a resistor with less resistance.
 
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