Physics Olympiad question resistance and Electric circuit

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a Physics Olympiad question regarding an electric circuit with resistors. Joining points C and D results in no current flow between them, indicating a potential difference of zero. Consequently, the potential difference across CO remains unchanged. The participants also discuss the implications of current direction, noting that it can be assigned arbitrarily, as it may yield positive or negative values depending on the chosen direction. Understanding these concepts is crucial for solving the remaining questions about resistances in the circuit.
Hashiramasenju
Messages
36
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


In the fig all resistors have resistance R. If pd of V is applied across AB.
upload_2015-11-12_7-39-12.jpeg


1)What is the outcome of joining C and D
2)Whats is the pd across CO
3)what is the resistance across A and B
4)What is the resistance across AO

Homework Equations


V=IR
1/∑R=1/R1 +1/R2

The Attempt at a Solution


So for
1) i thought that it would cause a short circuit because instead of flowing through the resistors co &od it would directly flow.
2)?
3)?
4)?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hashiramasenju said:
1) i thought that it would cause a short circuit because instead of flowing through the resistors co &od it would directly flow.
What would flow from where to where? You are connecting C and D, not E and F.
 
what is the potential difference between C and D
 
donpacino said:
what is the potential difference between C and D
zero
 
So i understand that between C and D no current flows. So there is ans for 2)no change right ?
 
Hashiramasenju said:
So i understand that between C and D no current flows. So there is ans for 2)no change right ?
yup :)
 
so is the current direction i marked correct ? and does current flow from o to d or d to o ?
 
you won't know unless you know the resistor values... the real question, does the current direction you pick matter?
 
As currents can be negative, you can draw the arrows in any direction you like. One direction will lead to positive current, one to negative current - unless the current is zero of course.
Hashiramasenju said:
So i understand that between C and D no current flows. So there is ans for 2)no change right ?
Correct. How did you figure that out? A proper description will help with the next part.
 
Back
Top