You seem to be confusing a lot of different things.
By using a parallel circuit, more branches means each load has a higher voltage input, thus allowing a higher value for V in R=V/I.
That doesn't make any sense. If you add loads in parallel with existing loads then all the loads will have the same voltage. .
What I'm asking is why if I have a parallel circuit and I fit another five light bulbs to one of the circuits, the equivalent resistance equations report a lower Re.
What do you mean by "fit another five light bulbs to
one of the circuits"?? Do you mean fit in parallel with or in series with? It makes all the difference. Best draw a before and after circuit so we know what you mean.
My science teacher says that Re is the internal resistance of a battery.
That's another subject. The notation Re can mean anything you want. . Re could mean "the equivalent resistance of the battery" OR "the equivalent resistance of part of the circuit we discussed last wednesday". Context is everything. In maths "X" and "y" get reused a lot. It's the same with electronics.
In the first part above you talk about Re being the equivalent resistance of several loads. You can use Re to refer to the internal resistance of a battery BUT best not to do that if you are talking about the same circuit or it will get confusing.
Lets call the internal resistance of the battery R
int from now on...
Internal resistance seems to be something built into the battery. However, how can internal resistance equal Re? And a battery "recycles" electrons so as the source of voltage and current, how can it reduce current?
Batteries are not ideal voltage sources. If you were to try and draw a lot of current from a AAA battery it would not be able to maintain 1.5V. This effect can be modeled by treating the cell as an ideal voltage source in series with a resistor R
int.
Now if you add a load R
load the current will be
I = V / (R
int+R
load)
It's R
int+R
load because the load is in series with the internal resistance.
You can see that if R
int is increased the current will fall. As will the voltage measured at the battery terminals.
If I have 2 light bulbs in series, an ammeter will say the same current wherever put it. Wouldn't the current be greater before the first load that after the second?
No. If the current wasn't the same you would have more current arriving at a node than leaving it. That would be like a water pipe with more going in than coming out.
And if I have thirty light bulbs (more than a battery can sustain) in series, why aren't the first few brighter than the last?
Given that the same current flows through each (see above) AND each bulb has the same resistance then the voltage drop across each bulb will be the same V=IR.
The power in each bulb is P=IV. If I and V are the same then the power and brightness is the same.