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Significance

Total power dissipated by the resistors is also 18.00 W:

P 1 + P 2 + P 3 = 9.00 W + 4.50 W + 4.50 W = 18.00 W .

Notice that the total power dissipated by the resistors equals the power supplied by the source.

Check Your Understanding Consider the same potential difference ( V = 3.00 V ) applied to the same three resistors connected in series. Would the equivalent resistance of the series circuit be higher, lower, or equal to the three resistor in parallel? Would the current through the series circuit be higher, lower, or equal to the current provided by the same voltage applied to the parallel circuit? How would the power dissipated by the resistor in series compare to the power dissipated by the resistors in parallel?

The equivalent of the series circuit would be R eq = 1.00 Ω + 2.00 Ω + 2.00 Ω = 5.00 Ω , which is higher than the equivalent resistance of the parallel circuit R eq = 0.50 Ω . The equivalent resistor of any number of resistors is always higher than the equivalent resistance of the same resistors connected in parallel. The current through for the series circuit would be I = 3.00 V 5.00 Ω = 0.60 A , which is lower than the sum of the currents through each resistor in the parallel circuit, I = 6.00 A . This is not surprising since the equivalent resistance of the series circuit is higher. The current through a series connection of any number of resistors will always be lower than the current into a parallel connection of the same resistors, since the equivalent resistance of the series circuit will be higher than the parallel circuit. The power dissipated by the resistors in series would be P = 1.80 W , which is lower than the power dissipated in the parallel circuit P = 18.00 W .

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Check Your Understanding How would you use a river and two waterfalls to model a parallel configuration of two resistors? How does this analogy break down?

A river, flowing horizontally at a constant rate, splits in two and flows over two waterfalls. The water molecules are analogous to the electrons in the parallel circuits. The number of water molecules that flow in the river and falls must be equal to the number of molecules that flow over each waterfall, just like sum of the current through each resistor must be equal to the current flowing into the parallel circuit. The water molecules in the river have energy due to their motion and height. The potential energy of the water molecules in the river is constant due to their equal heights. This is analogous to the constant change in voltage across a parallel circuit. Voltage is the potential energy across each resistor.
The analogy quickly breaks down when considering the energy. In the waterfall, the potential energy is converted into kinetic energy of the water molecules. In the case of electrons flowing through a resistor, the potential drop is converted into heat and light, not into the kinetic energy of the electrons.

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Let us summarize the major features of resistors in parallel:

  1. Equivalent resistance is found from
    R eq = ( 1 R 1 + 1 R 2 + 1 R 3 + + 1 R N 1 + 1 R N ) −1 = ( i = 1 N 1 R i ) −1 ,

    and is smaller than any individual resistance in the combination.
  2. The potential drop across each resistor in parallel is the same.
  3. Parallel resistors do not each get the total current; they divide it. The current entering a parallel combination of resistors is equal to the sum of the current through each resistor in parallel.
Practice Key Terms 1

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
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