Lab 10: Ohm's Law and Resistance
Learning Objectives
- Verify the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance for an ohmic conductor.
- Construct a voltage-current graph and determine resistance from its slope.
- Compare measured resistance with nominal or color-code resistance.
- Practice safe use of power supplies, ammeters, voltmeters, and resistors.
This placeholder is prepared for a complete laboratory experiment on Ohm's Law. It can be completed with physical circuit components, a breadboard, multimeters, variable DC supply, or a circuit simulation when equipment is limited.
Ohm's Law
For an ohmic conductor at constant temperature, voltage is proportional to current.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| potential difference or voltage | V | |
| electric current | A | |
| resistance | Ω |
Resistance from graph
The slope of a voltage-current graph gives resistance.
Suggested Apparatus
Placeholder procedure outline
- Build a simple series circuit with the resistor and ammeter.
- Connect the voltmeter in parallel with the resistor.
- Start at a low voltage and record the corresponding current.
- Increase voltage in small steps and record voltage-current pairs.
- Avoid overheating the resistor by using safe voltage limits.
- Plot versus and determine the slope.
- Compare the experimental resistance with the nominal value.
Data Table Placeholder
Electrical safety
Use low-voltage DC sources only for this introductory activity. Turn off the power before changing connections and do not short-circuit the supply.
To complete this lab
Add circuit diagrams, resistor color-code instructions, graphing requirements, sample calculation, and post-lab questions on non-ohmic behavior and temperature effects.