Asked by ben hen

Question
Circuit A has a resistance of 7.5 ohms, and circuit B has a resistance of 5 ohms. Which statement about the circuits must be correct?(1 point)
Responses

If the current in circuit A is equal to the current in circuit B, then the voltage in circuit A is less than the voltage in circuit B.
If the current in circuit A is equal to the current in circuit B, then the voltage in circuit A is less than the voltage in circuit B.

If the voltage of circuit A is equal to the voltage of circuit B, then the current in circuit A is less than the current in circuit B.
If the voltage of circuit A is equal to the voltage of circuit B, then the current in circuit A is less than the current in circuit B.

If the voltage of circuit A is equal to the voltage of circuit B, then the current in circuit A is equal to the current in circuit B.
If the voltage of circuit A is equal to the voltage of circuit B, then the current in circuit A is equal to the current in circuit B.

If the current in circuit A is less than the current in circuit B, then the voltage in circuit A is less than the voltage in circuit B.
If the current in circuit A is less than the current in circuit B, then the voltage in circuit A is less than the voltage in circuit B.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Correct answer: "If the voltage of circuit A is equal to the voltage of circuit B, then the current in circuit A is less than the current in circuit B."

Reason: By Ohm's law V = IR. If V is the same, I = V/R, so I_A = V/7.5 and I_B = V/5. Since 7.5 > 5, I_A < I_B.