Skip to main content

Home/ WMS Science Teachers/ Group items tagged resistance

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Burk

Resistance « Teach. Brian. Teach. - 1 views

  • Because of this, and despite the fact that it is common practice, it is sort of a mistake to find the resistance of a circuit element by plotting V vs I and finding the slope. Obviously, if the circuit element is non-ohmic it doesn’t make any sense to report a single R value. However, even if the circuit element can be nicely approximated by Ohm’s Law, it actually makes more sense to report the value of R as an average of all V/I ratios than it does to calculate the resistance by determining the slope of the best fit line.  This is especially the case if your best fit-line has a non-zero y-intercept.
  •  
    very interesting subtlety about the definition of resistance and finding R from a I-V plot. 
John Burk

Onset of Electrical Resistance Measured for First Time | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

  • Using a fast-pulsing laser, physicists have recorded the first moments of electrical resistance, the friction that generates heat as electricity travels through circuits.
  • Physicists knew electrical resistance didn’t kick in the moment a voltage was applied. Electrons experience some freedom before slowing to a crawl and scattering. What wasn’t certain was how quickly they make that transition (illustrated in the animation above, with electrons in blue, “electron holes” left by departing electrons in red, and voltage signified by the green arrow).
  •  
    post contains very interesting video simulation showing electrons in a semiconductor responding to the applied voltage. 
1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20 items per page