1 / 18

Voltage, Current, Resistance, Ohm’s Law

Voltage, Current, Resistance, Ohm’s Law. 10.9, 10.10. 10.9 Electric Current. Shocks from electric circuits are very serious in comparison to shocks from static electricity. Every year people are injured and sometimes die from electrocution.

jana-mooney
Télécharger la présentation

Voltage, Current, Resistance, Ohm’s Law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Voltage, Current, Resistance, Ohm’s Law 10.9, 10.10

  2. 10.9 Electric Current • Shocks from electric circuits are very serious in comparison to shocks from static electricity. • Every year people are injured and sometimes die from electrocution. • Surprisingly small amounts of electric current are lethal.

  3. Electric current is a measure of the rate at which electric charges move past a given point in a circuit. • Unit for current is Ampere (A). • Symbol in the Ohm’s Law formula for current is (I).

  4. Read p 314-315 • How much current do you think someone experiences when they are electrocuted (death by the electric chair)? • Why is it dangerous to try to help someone who is experiencing an electric shock? Explain what you should do if you wish to help that person? • Page 315 - Answer questions 1, 5

  5. ELECTRIC POTENTIAL: VOLTAGE (V) • A volt is a measure of electrical pressure and is named after the Italian scientist Alessandro Volta. • The energy each electron has is called the electric potential. Electric potential is commonly referred to as voltage.

  6. CURRENT (I) • Electric current is the quantity of electricity going by a point in a circuit. • Current (I) is measured with an ammeter. The unit used to measure electric current is the ampere, which is named after the French physicist A.M Ampere.

  7. RESISTANCE (R) (p. 316) • The molecules of all types of conductors impede, or resist, the flow of electrons to some extent. • This ability to impede the flow of electrons in conductors is called electrical resistance (R).

  8. RESISTANCE • The resistance to the passage of electric current is measured with the ohmmeter. The unit is the ohm, named after the German scientist George Ohm. • INSULATORS oppose the flow of electric current and have a high resistance. • CONDUCTORS have a low resistance.

  9. Factors that affect the resistance of wires: • The thickness of wires • The length of wire • The material wire is made of • The temperature of the wire

  10. This might help… • An analogy to help understand these terms is a system of plumbing pipes. The voltage (V) is equivalent to the water pressure, the current (I) is equivalent to the flow rate, and the resistance (R) is like the pipe size.

  11. OHM’S LAW George Ohm figured out a basic law for electricity V= Volts (electrical potential) I= Amperes (current) R= Ohms (resistance) V = I x R I = V / R R = V / I

  12. OHM’S LAW • Current is directly proportional to voltage, therefore, increasing (↑) the voltage increases (↑) the current. • The current is inversely proportional to resistance; therefore, as resistance increases (↑), current decreases (↓).

  13. Question What is the formula for Ohm’s Law? V = I x R If a coffee grinder has a current of 1.20A and resistance is 100Ω, what is the voltage? 120 V

  14. Questions • P.319 #1,2,5

  15. A couple of extras… If the current of a walkman is 4.7 A and the resistance of 26Ω, what is the voltage? If a food dehydrator has a voltage of 320V and has a current of 18.5A, what is the resistance?

  16. Answers 122.2 V 17.3Ω

  17. Chapter 10 Review Questions • p. 328-329 • # 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13 and 14

More Related