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Assignment

This document contains two assignments with multiple questions about electrical circuit concepts. Assignment 1 asks questions about why current requires a voltage source, differences between voltage and current, charge calculation, and power calculation. Assignment 2 asks questions about differences between work and power, reasons for less current with more resistance, voltage division, power dissipation, voltage and current calculations in series circuits, and Kirchhoff's voltage law calculations.

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Faisal Yazdanie
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
682 views

Assignment

This document contains two assignments with multiple questions about electrical circuit concepts. Assignment 1 asks questions about why current requires a voltage source, differences between voltage and current, charge calculation, and power calculation. Assignment 2 asks questions about differences between work and power, reasons for less current with more resistance, voltage division, power dissipation, voltage and current calculations in series circuits, and Kirchhoff's voltage law calculations.

Uploaded by

Faisal Yazdanie
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Assignment No.

1
Q1. Explain briefly why there is no current in a light bulb unless it is connected across a source of applied voltage. Q2. Give two differences between voltage and current. Q3. A current of 3A charges an insulator for 3 s. how much charge is accumulated? Q4. If 18.75x1018 electrons are added to a neutral dielectric, how much charge, in coulombs, is being stored? Q5. Suppose that 1000 electrons are removed from a neutral dielectric. How much charge; in coulombs, is stored in the dielectric? Q6. Calculate the voltage output of a battery if 15 J of energy is expended in moving 1.25 C of charge. Q7. Calculate the power in a circuit where the source of 100 V produces 2A in a 50 resistor. Q8. How many watts is the power of 200J/s equal to? Q9. Resistance R has 10 V with 2A. Calculate the values for P and R.

Assignment No. 2
Q1. What is the difference between work and power? Give two units for each. Q2. Why does more resistance with the same applied voltage result in less current? Q3. (a) Voltage V1 of 40 V is series-aiding with V2 of 60 V. How much is VT? (b) The same V1 and V2 are connected series-opposing. How much is VT? Q4. An applied VT of 120 V produces IR drops across two series resistors R1 and R2. If the voltage drop across R1 is 49 V, how much is the voltage drop across R2? Q5. A 120 V source is applied across three equal resistances in series. How much is each IR drop? Q6. Each of three equal resistances dissipates 2 W. how much PT is supplied by the source? Q7. How much Voltage V is needed for a 1.8mA current through resistances R1 of 4.7K and R2 of 6.8K in series? Q8. How much resistance R1 must be added in series with a 100 R2 to limit the current to 0.3A with 120 V applied? Show the schematic diagram. How much power is dissipated in each resistance? Q9. A 100-W bulb normally takes 0.833A, and a 200-W bulb takes 1.666A from the 120 V power line. If these two bulbs were connected in series across a 240 V power line, prove that the current would be 1.111A in both bulbs, assuming the resistances remain constant. Q10. Prove that if VT = V1 + V2 +V3 + V4, then RT = R1 + R2 +R3 + R4 Q11. A voltage source produces an IR drop of 40 V across a 20 R1, 60 V across a 30 R2, and 180 V across a 90 R3, all in series. According to KVL, how much is applied Voltage VT?

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