I really don't understand Kirchhoff's Law

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around Kirchhoff's Laws, specifically focusing on analyzing a circuit to find the currents I1, I2, and I3. Participants express confusion regarding the application of these laws and the setup of equations based on the circuit diagram provided.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the difficulty in setting up equations for the loops and question the signs used for voltage drops across resistors. There is a focus on understanding the reasoning behind the equations provided in the textbook and how to correctly apply Kirchhoff's Laws.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the circuit behavior. Some guidance has been offered regarding the direction of current and the signs associated with voltage drops, but there is still confusion and lack of consensus on certain aspects.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working from a textbook that may have unclear explanations, leading to questions about the assumptions made regarding current direction and voltage drops across resistors. There is an emphasis on understanding the relationships between different components in the circuit.

flyingpig
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Homework Statement



http://img827.imageshack.us/img827/6426/81545181.th.png Find all the currents I1, I2, I3

2. The attempt at a solution

I find that solving the numbers is trivial, all I got to do is isolate them and put them in an augmented matrix and solve. But setting them is really difficult for me.

I really don't understand what my book is doing.

For the Loopabcd, in the path d → a the book subtracted -2.0Ω(I3), WHY?

Isn't this what is actually happening?

http://img156.imageshack.us/img156/4176/98865057.th.png

Because I am assuming that is what's happening to I1 for the 6.0Ω resistor in Loopbefcb

Now my other question is, why is it 6.0Ω(I1) and not 6.0Ω(12)?3. Solutions given by book

Loopabcd = 10.0V - 6.0Ω(I1) - 2.0Ω(I3)

Loopbefcb = -4.0Ω(I2) - 14.0V + 6.0Ω(I1) = 0
 
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Consider each loop separately. Assign a current to each branch (doesn't matter the direction). Set up a junction rule equation based on the sum of currents and set up two or more loop rules. Isolate and solve for unknown variables. In your specific case, I1 + I2 = I3
 
flyingpig said:

Homework Statement



http://img827.imageshack.us/img827/6426/81545181.th.png


Find all the currents I1, I2, I3

2. The attempt at a solution

I find that solving the numbers is trivial, all I got to do is isolate them and put them in an augmented matrix and solve. But setting them is really difficult for me.

I really don't understand what my book is doing.


For the Loopabcd, in the path d → a the book subtracted -2.0Ω(I3), WHY?

Isn't this what is actually happening?

http://img156.imageshack.us/img156/4176/98865057.th.png

Because I am assuming that is what's happening to I1 for the 6.0Ω resistor in Loopbefcb

Now my other question is, why is it 6.0Ω(I1) and not 6.0Ω(12)?


3. Solutions given by book

Loopabcd = 10.0V - 6.0Ω(I1) - 2.0Ω(I3)

Loopbefcb = -4.0Ω(I2) - 14.0V + 6.0Ω(I1) = 0

Try reducing the circuits down to simplified ones by looking at each one separately. Follow a path around the loop to find ones that are in series or in parallel and then combine the resistors appropriately. Once you get to a simplified circuit, work backwards to the more complicated ones.
 
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I don't think you guys are understanding properly...

THIS IS WHERE I AM HAVING PROBLEMS WITH. My path d to a is wrong or the book is
 
Hello again old friend, flyingpig.

As you go from d to a, you are going in the same direction as the assumed current, I3. Do you see why?

As the current passes through the 2.0 Ω resistor, it loses energy. In terms of electric potential there is a voltage drop equal to the current times the resistance.

A page or two prior to this example, Serway gives instructions on what sign to use when traversing a resistor or a voltage source as you make your way around a loop.
 
SammyS said:
Hello again old friend, flyingpig.

As you go from d to a, you are going in the same direction as the assumed current, I3. Do you see why?

Yes and it therefore it should be -IR

As the current passes through the 2.0 Ω resistor, it loses energy. In terms of electric potential there is a voltage drop equal to the current times the resistance.

A page or two prior to this example, Serway gives instructions on what sign to use when traversing a resistor or a voltage source as you make your way around a loop.

Yes yes, I am using the dumb book, and it says it is -IR
 
Looks to me like it says: -(2.0Ω)(I3), which is -IR for the quantities involved.
 
What about the 6.0Ω resistor? As you go from c → b, the current flows in the same direction and hence it should be -IR right? They have +IR and it really confuses me
 
No. They have have - 6.0Ω(I1) as they go from b → c.

From you post #1: " Loopabcd = 10.0V - 6.0Ω(I1) - 2.0Ω(I3) " = 0 (I added this.)
 
  • #10
I am talking about Loopbefcb = -4.0Ω(I2) - 14.0V + 6.0Ω(I1) = 0
 
  • #11
I could have sworn you had asked about b → c , not c → b. (Sorry for the brain fart.)

That's a different loop, which you are traversing in the opposite direction relative to the other loop. You are comparing the energy in charge carriers after they have expended their energy in the resistor with charge carriers before they have expended their energy in the resistor. You go from the lower to higher energy end of the resistor.
 
  • #12
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  • #13
Can we use the word traveling and not traversing?
 
  • #14
Sure. ...but nothing wrong with expanding your vocab!

Have a good one!
 
  • #15
flyingpig said:
Can we use the word traveling and not traversing?

Actually no. To traverse means to "travel across" (something). (EDIT: and just to pre-empt your inevitable nitpicking, more generally it could mean to travel "along the entire extent of" something). So "traverse" can take a direct object, which is why he said "traversing the loop."

You can't say "travelling the loop." You'd have to add the word "around" in. But why use two words when you can use one that means the same thing?

:-p :biggrin: :-p :smile:

Okay, I'm done being obnoxious now.
 
  • #16
SammyS said:
Sure. ...but nothing wrong with expanding your vocab!

Have a good one!

WHAT! But you didn't answer my other question!?

cepheid said:
Actually no. To traverse means to "travel across" (something). So "traverse" can take a direct object, which is why he said "traversing the loop."

You can't say "travelling the loop." You'd have to add the word "around" in. But why use two words when you can use one that means the same thing?

:-p :biggrin: :-p :smile:

Okay, I'm done being obnoxious now.

...
 
  • #17
flyingpig said:
WHAT! But you didn't answer my other question!?
...

Heh, what are you freaking out about? Maybe he had to go somewhere?

What is your question anyway? Basically as SammyS already explained, the potential decreases in going across a resistor, due to energy losses incurred while traversing (travelling across) it. So, if the current is assumed to flow across a resistor from right to left, the potential at the right end of the resistor should be assumed to be higher than the potential at the left end (by an amount IR).

If the current is assumed to flow across the resistor from left to right, the potential at the left end should be assumed to higher than the potential at the right end (by an amount IR). If your assumed polarity is wrong, you'll get a negative answer for V and I, which is fine.

In the first picture in your latest post, the current is flowing across the resistor from right to left. So the potential at the end of the resistor that is attached to point c is higher than the potential at the other end, which is attached to the battery (let's call this end point e). Therefore, the voltage drop in going from c to b is the sum of the voltages across the resistor and across the battery:

Vcb = Vce + Veb = IR + Vbatt

where I've used the notation Vxy is defined as Vx - Vy

Does that clear things up?
 
  • #18
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  • #19
flyingpig said:

The part of my post that you quoted, and what you wrote underneath it (and on the diagram) are in direct contradiction. Perhaps it would help if I were more explicit:

In this example, the current is flowing from right to left. Therefore, the potential at the right end (point c) is HIGHER than the potential at the left end (point e) by an amount IR.. You've stated that you agree with me on this.

Mathematically, the red part of what I just said is:

Vc > Ve

→ Vc - Ve > 0

Agreed?

The blue part of what I just said includes the additional information that the difference is given by IR:

Vc - Ve = +IR

Hence:

Vce ≡ Vc - Ve = +IR

This is now step by step. Is that a better explanation?
 
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  • #20
Then what about the 2.00Ω resistor? It follows the same argument, but it is -IR
 
  • #21
flyingpig said:
Then what about the 2.00Ω resistor? It follows the same argument, but it is -IR

Using our logic, and given the assumed direction of I3, we have

Vda = I3*R

Vad = -I3*R

So, since the potential is higher at d than at a, you LOSE I3*R volts in going from d to a. So if you're tallying voltages around a loop, you'd subtract I3*R for the portion from d to a, since you went from high to low.

The same true for the journey from c to b.
 
  • #22
I just thought of a better way of explaining it. If you go from point d to point a, then Va is your final potential, and Vd is your initial potential. In all cases, the change in potential on a journey between two points is given by:

Vfinal - Vinitial

In this case that is given by:

Va - Vd

Since our assumed direction of current leads us to believe that Vd > Va, the change in potential will be negative. That's what I meant when I said, "you're going from high to low, hence you subtract."
 
  • #23
Sorry for not reading your post right now because I am half asleep (been at it since this afternoon)

But I used something called Maxwell's Loop Method and I got (all going counterclockwise)

(1) 10 - 6I_1 + 14 - 4I_1 + 6I_2= 0

(2) -10 - 2I_2 - 6I_2 + 6I_1 = 0

Solving I get I1 = 3A and I2 = 1A

I can't help but feel there is something wrong. How do I match my I1 and I2 to the question?

Also, when we apply Maxwell's method, can we ever apply it to the ENTIRE loop?

Thanks! I am going to slee
 
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  • #24
Also, since I1 + I2 isn't 0 (it is 4A), does that mean I screwed it up?
 
  • #25
flyingpig said:
They are really related to each other.

In the path from c to b for the top loop

http://img64.imageshack.us/img64/2377/87365174.th.jpg

Uploaded with ImageShack.us

This is how the current is coming back, that is from c to b this should be -IR, but they have +IR
"They" show the current, I1, to be going in the direction b → c. (See your first http://img827.imageshack.us/i/81545181.png/" .) As you travel around the Loopbefcb, you go c → b, opposite the current I1. Therefore, it's +(6.0Ω)I1.
Now the same situation for the 2.0Ω resistor.

http://img849.imageshack.us/img849/6426/81545181.th.png

Uploaded with ImageShack.us

Notice how they have a -IR like it should be?
Both are the way they "should be" !
 
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  • #26
Hi flying pig.In your opening post you wrote down the "solutions given by the book" but these don't seem to make sense.In one equation you wrote:
loop abcd=10V-6I1-2I3
How can a loop equal the things on the right side of the equation.Did you mean to say that :
0=10V-6I1-2I3?
You need to look at the second equation also.
 
  • #27
flyingpig said:
Sorry for not reading your post right now because I am half asleep (been at it since this afternoon)

But I used something called Maxwell's Loop Method and I got (all going counterclockwise)

(1) 10 - 6I_1 + 14 - 4I_1 + 6I_2= 0

(2) -10 - 2I_2 - 6I_2 + 6I_1 = 0

Solving I get I1 = 3A and I2 = 1A

I can't help but feel there is something wrong. How do I match my I1 and I2 to the question?

Also, when we apply Maxwell's method, can we ever apply it to the ENTIRE loop?

Thanks! I am going to slee

Please note that I'm studying Kirchoff's Laws the same as you, but I believe you did something wrong. Namely, you did not solve for three equations in three unknowns, which is what the problem called for.

From what I understand -- and PF, please correct me -- Kirchoff's Laws are arbitrary. You assume current flows in such-and-such direction. If you're wrong, you get a negative value, in which case you can just flip some signs around until you get it all correct. A given complex circuit has many more possible equations than you could ever need, from the junction and loop rules. This is really a shotgun approach, not a sniper approach. Just keep spewing out equations until you get an answer that works. From what I understand of Kirchoff's Laws, the math will work itself out.
 
  • #28
flyingpig said:
I should have included this comment in one of my previous posts.

In the above figure, you show the direction of the current, I, to be in the opposite direction of what I1 is in the figure from the textbook. Therefore, I = -I1, where I is the current in the above figure, and I1 is the current in the figure from your textbook.

I would write more: about being consistent with labeling ... , but you do have a tendency to be unclear about what particular point you are addressing when replying. I'll be patient & wait for another opportunity.
 
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  • #29
cepheid said:
Since our assumed direction of current leads us to believe that Vd > Va, the change in potential will be negative. That's what I meant when I said, "you're going from high to low, hence you subtract."

Then why did you say

cepheid said:
Vda = I3*R

Vad = -I3*R
 
  • #30
Dadface said:
Hi flying pig.In your opening post you wrote down the "solutions given by the book" but these don't seem to make sense.In one equation you wrote:
loop abcd=10V-6I1-2I3
How can a loop equal the things on the right side of the equation.Did you mean to say that :
0=10V-6I1-2I3?
You need to look at the second equation also.

Sammy corrected it already, I just forgot to edit it and now I can't edit it. God why does PF delete the edit button after a while?
 

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