Is current reduced in a resistor?

  • Thread starter Thread starter infomike
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Current Resistor
AI Thread Summary
In a series circuit, the current remains constant throughout, including in resistors or loads like light bulb filaments. While resistance does cause energy loss in the form of heat, it does not change the amount of current flowing into and out of a resistor; the total number of electrons entering must equal those exiting to prevent charge buildup. Electrons may slow down due to interactions with atomic nuclei, but this does not affect the overall current flow, as they push each other along. The energy lost by electrons in a resistor contributes to the voltage drop across it, while the current is determined by the relationship I = U/R. Overall, current remains the same throughout the circuit, including within resistors.
infomike
Messages
44
Reaction score
0
Everyone knows the classic series circuit rule that states that current is the same everywhere, but is this also true in the resistors or a load, like a light bulb filament? I would think that the resistance caused by the electrons smashing against the atomic nucleii in the conductor would cause a reduction in current. The reduced electron velocity would be transferred to the nucleii in the conductor, causing heat.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Resistance does cause a reduction in current but the effect is for the entire circuit. It is a similar effect to water in a pipe. If I put a restriction in the pipe I will reduce the water flow but I cannot have more water flowing toward the restriction then away from it because the water would have no place to accumulate.
 
Hi infomike!

With any component, the electrons that go in must be equal to the electrons going out (on average).
If they didn't, charge would heap up, which is not something that can go on indefinitely.

So if electrons were diverted somewhere, other electrons will have to jump in, effectively making sure that the number of electrons that leave a power source is the same as the number of electrons that return to a power source (on average).

And yes, you will have losses in the form of heat, so those losses will have to be compensated by energy supplied by the power source, and electrons may have to be pulled in from somewhere else.
No one said that each electron has to make a full circuit.
 
infomike said:
Everyone knows the classic series circuit rule that states that current is the same everywhere, but is this also true in the resistors or a load, like a light bulb filament? I would think that the resistance caused by the electrons smashing against the atomic nuclei in the conductor would cause a reduction in current. The reduced electron velocity would be transferred to the nuclei in the conductor, causing heat.

The total number of electrons flowing into the filament per unit time must be equal to the number of electrons flowing out; otherwise charge would build up in the filament. So the current out is the the same as the current in.

You are right that the electrons want to slow down as they interact with the atoms of the conductor (not the nuclei - they don't get anywhere near the nucleus, but that's not relevant here). But if an electron slows down, the electron behind it gets closer and the one in front moves farther away, and as electrons repel one another the effect is to push the laggard forward harder. So the electrons keep on moving through even as energy is transferred to the atoms of the filament.
 
So would it be accurate to say that the velocity or energy lost by the electrons in a resistor is responsible for the voltage or potential drop across the resistor?
 
infomike said:
So would it be accurate to say that the velocity or energy lost by the electrons in a resistor is responsible for the voltage or potential drop across the resistor?

Yes.
The energy loss is the voltage drop times the charge transmitted.
 
Re-think your question from the perspective of charge conservation: If a certain amount of charge enters the resistor, it cannot go extinct, also not by collisions to nuclei (if we disregard nuclear reactions for the moment).
Of course, the current has a cause: an electric field aka a voltage difference.
Then, by definition, the (ohmic) resistance determines the current via I = U/R assuming a lot of things like linearity etc. But that's just how we define an ohmic resistor - it cannot have a different behaviour, see also here.
 
Thanks to all for all the good responses.
 
That's true, but I was referring to the current in a resistor, separate from the current in the rest of the circuit. In your example, the increased resistance will reduce the current everywhere in the circuit. I had mistakenly thought that current could be different in a resistor as opposed to the rest of the circuit.
 
Back
Top