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We had an experiment of charging and dicharging a capacitor in a RC circuit.Our instructor asked us to plot our data in a semilogarithmic paper.Then told us the formula of calculating the slope of such a curve.It was:
\frac {[the vertical distance between two points measured by a ruler]*2.3}{the distance of two successive ones]*[the difference of the two ponit's independent variables]}
then asked us two prove that what is this slope I did the following:
\frac{log \frac{i_{2}}{i_{1}} *ln{10}}{\Delta t}=\frac{ln{i_{2}}ln{i_{1}}}{\Delta t}
And we have ln{i} = ln{\frac{\Epsilon}{R}}-\frac{t}{RC}
So we get that the slope is -1/RC.
But the instructor says this proof is incomplete.What's the problem?Can you tell what quantity does this slope idicate?
thanks
\frac {[the vertical distance between two points measured by a ruler]*2.3}{the distance of two successive ones]*[the difference of the two ponit's independent variables]}
then asked us two prove that what is this slope I did the following:
\frac{log \frac{i_{2}}{i_{1}} *ln{10}}{\Delta t}=\frac{ln{i_{2}}ln{i_{1}}}{\Delta t}
And we have ln{i} = ln{\frac{\Epsilon}{R}}-\frac{t}{RC}
So we get that the slope is -1/RC.
But the instructor says this proof is incomplete.What's the problem?Can you tell what quantity does this slope idicate?
thanks