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.