Asked by xochitl
Circuit A has a voltage of 10 V, and circuit B has a voltage of 15 V. Which statement about the circuits is correct?(1 point)
Responses
If the current in circuit A is greater than the current in circuit B, then the resistance in circuit A is less than the resistance in circuit B.
If the current in circuit A is greater than the current in circuit B, then the resistance in circuit A is less than the resistance in circuit B.
If the resistance in circuit A is greater than the resistance in circuit B, then the current in circuit A is greater than the current in circuit B.
If the resistance in circuit A is greater than the resistance in circuit B, then the current in circuit A is greater than the current in circuit B.
If the current in circuit A equals the current in circuit B, then the resistance in circuit A equals the resistance in circuit B.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct answer: "If the current in circuit A is greater than the current in circuit B, then the resistance in circuit A is less than the resistance in circuit B."
Reason: Using Ohm’s law I = V/R, IA > IB means 10/RA > 15/RB → 10 RB > 15 RA → RB > (3/2)RA → RA < (2/3)RB, so RA is indeed less than RB. The other statements are not generally true.
Reason: Using Ohm’s law I = V/R, IA > IB means 10/RA > 15/RB → 10 RB > 15 RA → RB > (3/2)RA → RA < (2/3)RB, so RA is indeed less than RB. The other statements are not generally true.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.