Compute the equivalent resistance of the network in Fig. E26.13, and find the current in each resistor. The battery has negligible internal resistance.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The equivalent resistance is 5.0Ω and the current in each resistor is 8.0 A, 4.0 A, 3.0 A, and 9.0 A.

Step by step solution

01

Definition of series and parallel connection

In a series circuit, all components are connected in a way that one’s tail is connected to the second’s head and so on, the current flowing in all components is the same.

In a parallel circuit, all components are connected in a way that their heads and tails are connected so that the potential drop is the same for all the components.

02

Determine the equivalent resistance

Given data:

  • R1 = 3
  • R2 = 6
  • R3 = 12
  • R4 = 4
  • r = 0
  • = 60 V

Here,R1andR2are in parallel, so their combinationR12can be calculated as:

R12=R1R2R1+R2=363+6=2.0Ω

The same step forR3andR4as they are in parallel,

R34=R3R4R3+R4=12412+4=3.0Ω

So, the figure can be reduced as:

Now, both resistances are in series, so equivalent resistance can be given as:

Req=R12+R34=2.0+3.0=5.0Ω

03

Determine the current through each resistor

Here, asR12 andR34 are in series, therefore, they have the same current which equals to the current flows due to the battery and from Ohm’s law, the combination can be calculated as:

l12=l34=εReq=60.0eV5.0Ω=12A

Now,R1 andR2 have the same voltages as they are connected in parallel and this voltage equals to the voltage of their combination .

V12=V1=V2=I12R12

Plug the values,

V1=V2=12A2.0Ω=24.0V

Now, using Ohm’s law to calculate currents as:

l1=V1R1=24.0V3.0Ω=8.0A

And

l2=24.0V6.0Ω=4.0A

Similarly, we have l3=3.0Aand l4=9.0A.

Thus, the equivalent resistance is 5.0Ωand the current in each resistor is 8.0 A, 4.0 A, 3.0 A, and 9.0 A.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

An electrical conductor designed to carry large currents has a circular cross section 2.50 mm in diameter and is 14.0 m long. The resistance between its ends is 0.104Ω. (a) What is the resistivity of the material? (b) If the electric-field magnitude in the conductor is 1.28 V/m, what is the total current? (c) If the material has 8.5×1028free electrons per cubic meter, find the average drift speed under the conditions of part (b).

(a) What is the potential difference Vadin the circuit of Fig. P25.62? (b) What is the terminal voltage of the 4.00-Vbattery? (c) A battery with emf and internal resistance 0.50Ωis inserted in the circuit at d, with its negative terminal connected to the negative terminal of the 8.00-Vbattery. What is the difference of potential Vbcbetween the terminals of the 4.00-Vbattery now?

In the circuit, in Fig. E26.47 the capacitors are initially uncharged, the battery has no internal resistance, and the ammeter is idealized. Find the ammeter reading (a) just after the switch S is closed and (b) after S has been closed for a very long time.

The circuit shown in Fig. E25.33 contains two batteries, each with an emf and an internal resistance, and two resistors. Find (a) the current in the circuit (magnitude and direction) and (b) the terminal voltage Vabof the 16.0-V battery.

Fig. E25.33

An idealized ammeter is connected to a battery as shown in Fig.

E25.28. Find (a) the reading of the ammeter, (b) the current through the4.00Ω

resistor, (c) the terminal voltage of the battery.

Fig. E25.28.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free