Question:
With the resistance set at a constant value, such as 100 Ω,?
Shane Hunt
2011-07-03 22:52:42 UTC
With the resistance set at a constant value, such as 100 Ω, what happens to the current as the voltage is increased?
Three answers:
anonymous
2011-07-03 22:54:02 UTC
It increases as well.

Voltage=current x resistance

so if one side goes up so does the other
nijin
2011-07-04 06:09:10 UTC
Voltage (V) equals current( I) in Amps times resistance in Ohms(R)

V=IR

V/R=I

As voltage increase current will also if resistance stays constant.



example

100V = 1 Amps x 100 Ohms

200V = 2 Amps x 100 Ohms

They are directly related.
anonymous
2011-07-04 05:57:39 UTC
You should really just google ohms law rather than post such easy questions that googiling ohms law would answer. Might actually help you learn something.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...