Chapter 26: Problem 19
You wish to measure both the current through and the potential difference across some component of a circuit. It is not possible to do this simultaneously and accurately with ordinary voltmeters and ammeters. Explain why not.
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Chapter 26: Problem 19
You wish to measure both the current through and the potential difference across some component of a circuit. It is not possible to do this simultaneously and accurately with ordinary voltmeters and ammeters. Explain why not.
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A \(12.0-V\) battery is attached to a \(2.00-\mathrm{mF}\) capacitor and a \(100 .-\Omega\) resistor. Once the capacitor is fully charged, what is the energy stored in it? What is the energy dissipated as heat by the resistor as the capacitor is charging?
Consider a series \(\mathrm{RC}\) circuit with \(R=10.0 \Omega\) \(C=10.0 \mu \mathrm{F}\) and \(V=10.0 \mathrm{~V}\) a) How much time, expressed as a multiple of the time constant, does it take for the capacitor to be charged to half of its maximum value? b) At this instant, what is the ratio of the energy stored in the capacitor to its maximum possible value? c) Now suppose the capacitor is fully charged. At time \(t=\) 0 , the original circuit is opened and the capacitor is allowed to discharge across another resistor, \(R^{\prime}=1.00 \Omega\), that is connected across the capacitor. What is the time constant for the discharging of the capacitor? d) How many seconds does it take for the capacitor to discharge half of its maximum stored charge, \(Q\) ?
How can you light a \(1.0-\mathrm{W}, 1.5-\mathrm{V}\) bulb with your \(12.0-V\) car battery?
Two capacitors in series are charged through a resistor. Identical capacitors are instead connected in parallel and charged through the same resistor. How do the times required to fully charge the two sets of capacitors compare?
During a physics demonstration, a fully charged \(90.0-\mu \mathrm{F}\) capacitor is discharged through a \(60.0-\Omega\) resistor. How long will it take for the capacitor to lose \(80.0 \%\) of its initial energy?
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