Parallel Circuits (Oxford AQA IGCSE Physics)

Revision Note

Ann Howell

Expertise

Physics Content Creator

Parallel Circuits

  • For components connected in parallel:

    • The current from the supply splits in the branches

    • The potential difference across each branch is the same

    • The combined resistance is less than that of either component

Current in parallel

  • A junction in a parallel circuit is where two or more wires meet

    • The current is always split at a circuit junction

  • The current is conserved

    • This means the amount of current flowing into the junction is equal to the amount of current flowing out of it

    • This is because the charge is conserved

  • Current does not always split equally – often there will be more current in some branches than in others

    • The current in each branch will only be identical if the resistance of the components along each branch is identical

  • Current behaves in this way because it is the flow of electrons:

    • Electrons are physical matter – they cannot be created or destroyed

    • This means the total number of electrons (and hence current) going around a circuit must remain the same

    • When the electrons reach a junction, however, some of them will go one way and the rest will go the other

Current is split

The current going into a junction is equal to the current going out of it, for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
The current is split at a junction into individual branches

Potential difference in parallel

  • The potential difference across each branch is the same

Voltage is the same

The potential difference of the power source is 12 V and the potential difference through each branch and each lamp of this parallel circuit is also 12 V.
Lamps connected in a parallel circuit all have the same voltage going through them

Resistance in parallel

  • The combined resistance is less than the resistance of any of the individual components

  • If two resistors of equal resistance are connected in parallel, then the combined resistance will halve

    • Charge has more paths to travel along, so its flow is resisted less than if only one path existed

Resistance of two resistors

Combining resistors in parallel will reduce the total resistance in the circuit, for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
The above resistors will have a combined resistance which is less than 4 Ω

Worked Example

In the circuit below, ammeter A0 shows a reading of 10 A, and ammeter A1 shows a reading of 6 A.

The first branch: ammeter A0 and power supply. Second branch: ammeter A1 and resistor. Branch three: ammeter A2 and lamp.

What is the reading on ammeter A2?

Answer:

Step 1: Recall that at a junction, the current is conserved

  • This means that the total amount of current flowing into a junction is equal to the total amount flowing out

Step 2: Consider the first junction in the circuit where the current splits

  • The diagram below shows the first junction in the circuit

The 10 A current is split into 6 A and 4 A at the junction with A1, for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes.

Step 3: Calculate the missing amount of current

  • Since 10 A flows into the junction (the total current from the battery), 10 A must flow out of the junction

  • The question says that 6 A flows through ammeter A1 so the remaining current flowing through ammeter A2 must be:

10 A − 6 A = 4 A

  • Therefore, 4 A flows through ammeter A2

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Ann Howell

Author: Ann Howell

Ann obtained her Maths and Physics degree from the University of Bath before completing her PGCE in Science and Maths teaching. She spent ten years teaching Maths and Physics to wonderful students from all around the world whilst living in China, Ethiopia and Nepal. Now based in beautiful Devon she is thrilled to be creating awesome Physics resources to make Physics more accessible and understandable for all students no matter their schooling or background.