mtanney
- 2
- 0
Homework Statement
This problem is regarding electric circuits. The diagram in the book is a parallel circuit. The voltage of a single battery is 1.5V and there are three resistors. The two resistors that are in parallel are 6 ohms and 12 ohms. The third resistor is 8 ohms and the resistance in the battery is negligible.:
http://s194.photobucket.com/albums/z316/mtanney/?action=view¤t=schematic.jpg
I apologize for the crude diagram.
The question I got stuck is asking what the current flowing through the 6 ohm resistor is.
Homework Equations
The equivalent resistance (Req) of the two-resistor parallel combination is:
1/Req= 1/6 + 1/12
Req= 4ohms
The total current flowing through the battery is:
I=V/R
I=1.5/(4+8)
I=0.125A
The Attempt at a Solution
My prof actually wrote the answer of the question in my textbook, but I cannot understand how or why he did what he did.
His answer was thus:
I (of 6 ohms) = (12/18) x 0.125
=0.083A
I thought I=V/R, so this does not make sense to me. Can someone please explain why he did this the way he did? (Classes are finished and I cannot get a hold of him before the exam).
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Michelle.
Attachments
Last edited: