vaishnavsm
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Hi!
My text says that when the resistance is doubled, the heating effect is halved.
Joule's law of heating states that Resistance is Directly proportional to Heat produced.
I.E, R α H.
∴ 2R α 2H.
So, shouldn't the Heat be doubled.
Or, since the Potential Difference is constant, should I use
H = (V2 t) / R
instead of
H = I2Rt
?
Does Joule's law apply everywhere, or are there conditions?
Just to be clear, this isn't homework.
Thanks!
Vaishnav
My text says that when the resistance is doubled, the heating effect is halved.
Joule's law of heating states that Resistance is Directly proportional to Heat produced.
I.E, R α H.
∴ 2R α 2H.
So, shouldn't the Heat be doubled.
Or, since the Potential Difference is constant, should I use
H = (V2 t) / R
instead of
H = I2Rt
?
Does Joule's law apply everywhere, or are there conditions?
Just to be clear, this isn't homework.
Thanks!
Vaishnav