Resistance (Oxford AQA IGCSE Physics)

Revision Note

Ann Howell

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Resistance

  • Electrical components resist the flow of charge that passes through them

    • This is called resistance

  • Every electrical component has a resistance, even wires

    • In exam questions, the resistance of the wires, batteries, ammeters and voltmeters are assumed to be negligible

  • Resistors can be used in circuits to control the amount of current present

  • When the potential difference, V across a component remains constant then:

    • The greater its resistance R, then the smaller the current I that can pass through

    • The lower the resistance R then the larger the current I that can pass through

Relationship between current and resistance

Relationship between resistance and current, for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
A greater resistance means there is a lower current and vice versa
  • The resistance of a component can be found by measuring the current through and potential difference across, the component.

  • The relationship between the potential difference, current and resistance is given by the equation for Ohm's law:

V space equals space I space cross times space R

  • Where:

    • V is the potential difference measured in volts, V

    • I is the current measured in amperes (often just called amps), A

    • R is the resistance measured in ohms (the Greek letter omega), Ω

Formula triangle for Ohm's law

The formula triangle for Ohm's law has voltage or potential difference at the top, current on the bottom left and resistance on the bottom right
Use the formula triangle to help you rearrange the equation by covering the variable you want to find

Worked Example

Calculate the voltage across a resistor of resistance 10 Ω if there is a current of 0.3 A through it.

Answer:

Step 1: List the known quantities

  • Resistance, R = 10 Ω

  • Current, I = 0.3 A

Step 2: Write the equation relating resistance, potential difference and current

V space equals space I space cross times space R

Step 3: Substitute in the values

V space equals space 0.3 space cross times space 10 space equals space 3 space straight V

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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.