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Series and Parallel Circuits

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What you learned

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Key takeaway

  1. Series circuits have one path, so the same current passes through every load.
  2. Series loads share the source voltage, and the larger resistance takes the larger drop when the current is common.
  3. Parallel branches connect across the same two nodes, so each branch keeps the full battery voltage.
  4. Parallel branch currents depend on branch resistance and add back together at the source.
  5. Bulb brightness follows power, so topology can change brightness even when the battery and loads are unchanged.

Common misconception

Do not say current is used up by the first load or that the battery sends extra voltage into a parallel branch. Track the path structure first, then current, voltage, and power follow.

The battery voltage does not get stronger when you switch to parallel. Each branch keeps the same battery voltage because both branches connect across the same two nodes.

Choose the topology first, find the equivalent resistance the battery sees, then use Ohm's law to connect that one-number load to total current before reading branch voltage and power.

  1. Series equivalent resistance

    One series loop makes the resistances add directly.

  2. Parallel equivalent resistance

    Two parallel branches lower the one-number load seen by the battery.

  3. Whole-circuit Ohm's law

    Battery current depends on the battery voltage and the equivalent resistance of the full arrangement.

Worked examples

Work from the live circuit

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Frozen walkthrough

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Frozen walkthrough
Use the exact arrangement, resistances, and inspected time shown on screen. The same live circuit drives the loads, counters, overlays, and graphs below, so every calculation matches the stage.

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Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current circuit, what equivalent resistance does the battery feel, and what total current follows from that one-number load?

Battery voltage

12 V

Load A resistance

6 ohm

Load B resistance

6 ohm

1. Choose the equivalent-resistance rule for the live arrangement

This setup uses series loop, so .

2. Substitute the two live load values

With and , , so .

3. Apply Ohm's law to the whole circuit

.

4. Calculate the total current

That gives .

Equivalent resistance and total current

Series adds the two loads into one path, so the equivalent resistance rises and the same loop current must pass through both loads.

Quick test

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Starter track

Step 5 of 6

Electricity

Series and Parallel Circuits appears later in this track, so it is cleaner to start from the beginning first.

Previous step: Power and Energy in Circuits