CONCLUSION: Ohm's law gives a conductor the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance. Voltage measures the electrical potential difference across two points in a conductor. Current measures how many electrons flow across a given point under unit time.
The experiment demonstrated that the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance is described by Ohm's law. And the results of the experiment can be applied to a variety of real-world situations, such as designing electrical circuits, troubleshooting electrical circuits, and investigating the properties of resistors.
4-No. In an ideal diode, no current flows until V = 0.6 to 0.7 volts. Of course, (0, 0) is still a valid point on that curve. If you’re drawing the relationship for anything “passive,” then (0, 0) must be on the curve, since no energy is being supplied, and it requires energy to make current flow in any “real” load.
CONCLUSION: Ohm's law gives a conductor the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance. Voltage measures the electrical potential difference across two points in a conductor. Current measures how many electrons flow across a given point under unit time.
The experiment demonstrated that the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance is described by Ohm's law. And the results of the experiment can be applied to a variety of real-world situations, such as designing electrical circuits, troubleshooting electrical circuits, and investigating the properties of resistors.
4-No. In an ideal diode, no current flows until V = 0.6 to 0.7 volts. Of course, (0, 0) is still a valid point on that curve. If you’re drawing the relationship for anything “passive,” then (0, 0) must be on the curve, since no energy is being supplied, and it requires energy to make current flow in any “real” load.
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