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Two conducting wires of the same material and of equal lengths and equal diameters are first connected in series and then parallel in a circuit across the same potential difference. The ratio of heat produced in series and parallel combinations would be

  1. 1:2
  2. 2:1
  3. 1:4
  4. 4:1

Current Electricity

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Answer

1:4

Reason — Let Rs and Rp be the equivalent resistance of the wires when connected in series and parallel respectively.

Rs = R + R = 2R

1Rp=1R+1R=2R\dfrac{1}{\text{R}_\text{p}} = \dfrac{1}{\text{R}} + \dfrac{1}{\text{R}} = \dfrac{2}{\text{R}}

Rp = R2\dfrac{\text{R}}{2}

Let Ps and Pp be the power consumed in series and parallel circuits, respectively.

Power (P) = V2R\dfrac{\text{V}^2}{\text{R}}

Ps = V22R\dfrac{\text{V}^2}{\text{2R}}

and

Pp = V2R2=2V2R\dfrac{\text{V}^2}{\dfrac{\text{R}}{2}} = \dfrac{2\text{V}^2}{\text{R}}

For the same potential difference V, the ratio of the heat produced in the circuit is given by ratio of Ps and Pp hence

Hs:Hp=V22R2V2R=V2×R2R×2V2=14\text{H}s : \text{H}p = \dfrac{\dfrac{\text{V}^2}{\text{2R}}}{\dfrac{2\text{V}^2}{\text{R}}} \\[1em] = \dfrac{\text{V}^2 \times \text{R}}{\text{2R} \times 2\text{V}^2} \\[1em] = \dfrac{1}{4}

Hence, the ratio of the heat produced is 1:4.

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