"Voltage Drops"
Before we go any further
let's define what a "voltage drop" is. A voltage drop is the amount the voltage
lowers when crossing a component from the negative side to the positive side in a series
circuit. If you placed a multimeter across a resistor, the voltage drop would be the
amount of voltage you are reading. This is pictured with the red arrow in the
diagram. Say a battery is supplying 10 volts to a circuit of two resistors; each
having a value of 5 Ohms. According to the previous rules we figure out the total
resistance.:
RT = R1 + R2 = 5 = 5 = 10 Ohms
Next we calculate the amperage in the circuit:
I = V / RT = 10V / 10 Ohms = 1 Amp
Now that we know the amperage for the circuit (remember the amperage does not change in
a series circuit) we can calculate what the voltage drops across each resistor are using
Ohm's Law (V = I x R).
V1 = 1A x 5 Ohms = 5 V
V2 = 1A x 5 Ohms = 5 V
Now we get to the next rule. |