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Equivalent Resistance

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Key takeaway

  1. Equivalent resistance is the one resistor that makes the source voltage and total current match the original network.
  2. A valid first reduction comes from the wiring: one current path for series, or the same two nodes for parallel.
  3. After the highlighted pair becomes R_group, the outer resistor R1 adds in series to form the total R_eq.
  4. Lower total equivalent resistance makes the same battery drive a larger total current.
  5. Parallel branches share group voltage but can carry different currents, and their equivalent resistance is less than either branch alone.

Common misconception

Do not combine nearby-looking resistors just because they are drawn close together. Reduce only a true series path or true parallel node pair, and check that a parallel equivalent is smaller than each branch resistance.

Equivalent resistance is defined by matching what the source experiences: the same voltage across the circuit and the same total current through it.

Choose the group rule from the wiring: series means one shared current path, parallel means the same two nodes. Only after the group becomes R_group should R1 be added to get R_eq.

  1. Series grouped pair

    Use direct addition only when the highlighted pair lies on one unbranched path and carries the same current.

  2. Parallel grouped pair

    Use the parallel rule only when the highlighted pair connects across the same two group nodes and shares one group voltage.

  3. Total equivalent resistance

    After you reduce the highlighted group to one resistor, R1 still adds in series with that reduced block.

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Use the exact circuit on screen. The same resistor values, group mode, inspected time, overlays, and graphs drive the reduction steps below, so every calculation matches the live stage.

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Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current circuit, what does the highlighted pair reduce to, what total equivalent resistance does the battery see, and what total current follows?

Battery voltage

12 V

Outer resistor

4 ohm

Grouped resistor 2

6 ohm

Grouped resistor 3

6 ohm

1. Identify whether the highlighted pair is series or parallel

The highlighted pair is a series grouped pair, so .

2. Reduce the highlighted pair first

With and , , so .

3. Combine the reduced group with the outer resistor R1

Because stays in series with the whole block, , so .

4. Use the final equivalent resistance to find the total current

.

Grouped and total equivalent resistance

The grouped pair reduces by direct addition first, so the total equivalent stays larger before the source current is found.

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Step 6 of 6

Electricity

Equivalent Resistance appears later in this track, so it is cleaner to start from the beginning first.

Previous step: Series and Parallel Circuits