• Embed Doc
  • Readcast
  • Collections
  • CommentGo Back
Download
 
"The ideal voltmeter has infinite resistance as we want as littlecurrent to be drawn as possible from the circuit under test.Meanwhile, the ideal ammeter has zero resistance, so as to drop aslittle voltage as possible as electrons flow through it. "1. You want a voltmeter to measure voltage without affecting current,so with an infinite resistance, no current will flow through it.You want an ammeter to measure current without affecting voltage,so with a zero resistance, there will be no voltage drop across it.Obviously you'll never achieve either, but those are the ideal cases.2. Think of electricity flowing through a wire as being like water flowing through a pipe. The amperage, or current, would beanalogous to "gallons per minute". The voltage would be like"pounds per square inch" of pressure. So, to accurately measurecurrent (amps), you want as much current flowing through the meter as is safe for the meter, so low resistance is desired. To accuratelymeasure electrical pressure (voltage), you want a high resistance toflow so the meter itself does not siphon off enough flow to drop thepressure it is trying to measure.3. There are two parameters measured frequently in electric energy:voltage and amperage. Because the apparatus used to measurethem, have some distorting characteristics of their own, twoproblems area) the measure of the "avidity" between two poles or points withdifferent potential (voltage) is distorted by the measuring apparatusor voltmeter, because when the current flows along (low resistanceexpressed in ohms) does not retain the energy long enough as tomeasure the TRUE values of the difference of voltage measured....(it would be ideal if electrons were stuck in the apparatus, however,electrons have to flow, given thus, a slightly "low" artificial reading)something that is impossible in real physics...b).-The Ammeter, measures the flux of electricity through a givenconductor (wire, piece of metal, water, you name it)...however,because it has spirals of metal, as part of the mechanism inside of it,it has a natural "resistance" that distorts the reading of the trueamperage, that is, the amount of flow of electrons through a givenconductor, giving a slight "low reading" and the waste of someenergy in the form of warmth, heath (kinetic or radiant energy)dispersed electrons that could not be read, as compared with thetheoretical. Mathematical expected values.The paragraph refers, that, there is as yet, no perfect apparatus tomeasure neither true voltage nor amperage in a given conductingsystem.ACIDFORMULAkApkAacetic acidH(C2H3O2)1.74 E-54.76ascorbic acid (1)H2(C6H6O6)7.94 E-54.10ascorbic acid (2)(HC6H6O6)
-
1.62 E-1211.79boric acid (1)H3BO35.37 E-109.27boric acid (2)(H2BO3)
-
1.8 E-1312.7boric acid (3)(HBO3)
=
1.6 E-1413.8butanoic acid H(C4H7O2)1.48 E-54.83carbonic acid (1)H2CO34.47 E-76.35carbonic acid (2)(HCO3)
-
4.68 E-1110.33chromic acid (1)H2CrO41.82 E-10.74chromic acid (2)(HCrO4)
-
3.24 E-76.49citric acid (1)H3(C6H5O7)7.24 E-43.14citric acid (2)(H2C6H5O7)
-
1.70 E-54.77citric acid (3)(HC6H5O7)
=
4.07 E-76.39formic acid H(CHO2)1.78 E-43.75heptanoic acid H(C7H13O2)1.29 E-54.89hexanoic acidH(C6H11O2)1.41 E-54.84hydrocyanic acid HCN6.17 E-109.21hydrofluoric acidHF6.31 E-43.20lactic acidH(C3H5O3)8.32 E-43.08nitrous acid HNO25.62 E-43.25octanoic acidH(C8H15O2)1.29 E-44.89oxalic acid (1)H2(C204)5.89 E-21.23oxalic acid (2)(HC2O4)
-
6.46 E-54.19pentanoic acidH(C5H9O2)3.31 E-54.84phosphoric acid (1)H3PO46.92 E-32.16phosphoric acid (2)(H2PO4)
-
6.17 E-87.21phosphoric acid (3) (HPO4)
=
2.09 E-1212.32propanoic acidH(C3H5O2)1.38 E-54.86sulfuric acid (2) (HSO4)-1.05 E-21.98sulfurous acid (1) H2SO31.41 E-21.85sulfurous acid (2)(HSO3)
-
6.31 E-87.20uric acid H(C5H3N4O3)1.29 E-43.89
of 00

Leave a Comment

You must be to leave a comment.
Submit
Characters: ...
You must be to leave a comment.
Submit
Characters: ...