Femme_physics said:
I do know that each R has its own V. Based on the formula V = IxR
I think we're onto something here.
It's not that each R has its own voltage V, but each R has its own "voltage difference", usually denoted ΔV.
Imho it's usually easiest to assign each point "between" resistors a "voltage amount".
The "voltage difference" of a resistor is then the difference between the "voltage amounts" on either side of the resistor.
A more precise version of the formula is ΔV=IxR.
Femme_physics said:
I do know that in a series circuit I is constant, in a parallel circuit it splits, but only if we know V can we know I everywhere. In this problem we have neither I or V!
Yes, that is correct. That is Kirchhoff's current law.
Femme_physics said:
We went through
Sum of all I going in equals to sum of all I going out
Sum of all series V equals to Vtotal.
And I think that's it.
Yes, you seem to understand Kirchhoff's current law perfectly. :)
Kirchhoff's voltage law is a little more nuanced.
What is more precisely says, is that the sum of all "voltage differences" in a closed loop is zero.
This works out to what you say, if we're just talking about resistors in series.
The key however, is that we're not talking about a "voltage amount" but about a "voltage difference".
So we talk about a current "through" a resistor, which is the current in the resistor.
And we talk about the voltage "across" a resistor, which is the "voltage difference" over the resistor.
Femme_physics said:
The voltage across R5 is R5 x I, as far as I know.
That's entirely right! :)
Femme_physics said:
I went with the conclusion that the power source is wherever I want it to be. If the power sources are between the two points then yes, I'm aware that my drawings would be wrong. Shouldn't the power source be defined a location?
Confused
The power source would be for instance a battery with the positive pole on the left side of the circuit and the negative pole on the right side of the circuit. It is not part of the circuit.
This would cause a "voltage difference" across the entire circuit. And because it is a battery, this voltage would be constant, regardless of the current flowing.
Typically we would assign the left side of the circuit a "voltage amount" V, and the right side of the circuit a "voltage amount" 0.