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.
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