Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage...

29
Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits

Transcript of Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage...

Page 1: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits

Page 2: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.
Page 3: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across the entire player?A. 3.0 V B. 4.0 VC. 6.0 V D. 12 V

Page 4: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across the entire player?A. 3.0 V B. 4.0 VC. 6.0 V D. 12 V

Page 5: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

2. Three resistors with values of 3.0 Ω, 6.0 Ω, and 12 Ω are connected in series. What is the equivalent resistance of this combination?A. 0.58 Ω B. 1.7 ΩC. 7.0 Ω D. 21 Ω

Page 6: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

2. Three resistors with values of 3.0 Ω, 6.0 Ω, and 12 Ω are connected in series. What is the equivalent resistance of this combination?A. 0.58 Ω B. 1.7 ΩC. 7.0 Ω D. 21 Ω

Page 7: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

3. Three resistors connected in parallel carry currents labeled I1, I2, and I3. Which of the following expresses the total current IT in the combined system?A. IT = I1 + I2 + I3

B. IT = (1/I1 + 1/I2 + 1/I3)C. IT = I1 = I2 = I3

D. IT = (1/I1 + 1/I2 + 1/I3)-1

Page 8: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

3. Three resistors connected in parallel carry currents labeled I1, I2, and I3. Which of the following expresses the total current IT in the combined system?A. IT = I1 + I2 + I3

B. IT = (1/I1 + 1/I2 + 1/I3)C. IT = I1 = I2 = I3

D. IT = (1/I1 + 1/I2 + 1/I3)-1

Page 9: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

4. What is the equivalent resistance for the resistors in the figure above?A. 25 Ω B. 10 ΩC. 7.5 Ω D. 5.0 Ω

Page 10: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

WOW, no figure! Sorry!

Page 11: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

1. What are the two formulas for calculating equivalent resistance?

Page 12: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

Series:RT = R1 + R2 + R3

Parallel:1/RT = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3

Page 13: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

2a. What is the equivalent resistance in the circuit shown above? b. If the battery is 12V, what is the current in the circuit? c. What is the current in the 6Ω resistor? d. What is the rate of energy dissipation for the 6Ω resistor? e. What is the rate of energy dissipation for the entire circuit?

Page 14: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

2a. The 8 Ω and 4 Ω resistors are replaced with a 12 Ω resistor. This 12 and the other 12 are in parallel, so they can be replaced with a 6 Ω resistor. The 6 Ω and 4 Ω resistors are in parallel, so they can be replaced with a 2.4 Ω resistor. This 2.4 Ω resistor is in series with the 6 Ω resistor, so the total resistance is 8.4 Ω.

Page 15: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

b. If the battery is 12V, what is the current in the circuit? V = IR 12 V = I x 8.4 Ω

I = 1.43 A

Page 16: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

c. What is the current in the 6Ω resistor? The 6 Ω resistor is in series with the source, so it gets all the current.

I = 1.43 A

Page 17: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

d. What is the rate of energy dissipation for the 6Ω resistor? The current I is 1.43 A. The voltage drop is V = IR, V = 1.43 x 6 = 8.58 V. P = IV P = 1.43 x 8.58

P = 12.3 W

Page 18: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

e. What is the rate of energy dissipation for the entire circuit?

P = IV P = 1.43 x 12

P = 17.16 W

Page 19: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

3. A student is provided with a 12.0-V battery of negligible internal resistance and four resistors with the following resistances: 100 Ω, 30 Ω, 20 Ω, and 10 Ω. The student also has plenty of wire of negligible resistance available to make the connections as desired. (a) Using all of these components, draw a circuit diagram in which each resistor has nonzero current flowing through it, but in which the current from the battery is as small as possible.

Page 20: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

A series circuit would make the resistance highest, so the current would be lowest.

Page 21: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

3. A student is provided with a 12.0-V battery of negligible internal resistance and four resistors with the following resistances: 100 Ω, 30 Ω, 20 Ω, and 10 Ω. The student also has plenty of wire of negligible resistance available to make the connections as desired.

(b) Using all of these components, draw a circuit diagram in which each resistor has nonzero current flowing through it, but in which the current from the battery is as large as possible (without short circuiting the battery).

Page 22: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

A parallel circuit would make the resistance lowest, so the current would be as high as possible.

Page 23: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

The battery and resistors are now connected in the circuit shown above. (c) Determine the equivalent resistance in the circuit.

Page 24: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

(c) Determine the equivalent resistance in the circuit.The 20 Ω and 30 Ω resistors are in series, so they are equal to a 50 Ω resistor. This 50 is in parallel with the 100 Ω resistor, so they can be replaced with a 33 Ω resistor. This 33 is in series with the 10, so the total resistance is 43 Ω.

Page 25: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

(d) Determine the current in the 10-Ω resistor. This resistor is in series with the source, so it gets all the current.V = IR 12 V = I x 43 Ω.

I = 0.28 A

Page 26: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

4. Three resistors with values of 16 Ω, 19 Ω, and 25 Ω, respectively, are connected in parallel. What is their equivalent resistance?

Page 27: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

1/RT = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3

1/RT = 1/16 + 1/19 + 1/251/RT = 0.0625 + 0.053 + 0.041/RT = 0.15513

RT = 6.45 Ω

Page 28: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.
Page 29: Chapter 20 Pretest Circuits. 1. If the batteries in a portable CD player provide a terminal voltage of 12 V, what is the potential difference across.

1/RP = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3

1/RP = 1/3 + 1/4 + 1/51/RP = 0.33 + 0.25 + 0.21/RP = 0.78RP = 1.28 Ω