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Ohm's law

Ohm's law states that the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points. Introducing the constant of proportionality, the resistance,[1] one arrives at the three mathematical equations used to describe this relationship:[2]

V, I, and R, the parameters of Ohm's law

where I is the current through the conductor, V is the voltage measured across the conductor and R is the resistance of the conductor. More specifically, Ohm's law states that the R in this relation is constant, independent of the current.[3] If the resistance is not constant, the previous equation cannot be called Ohm's law, but it can still be used as a definition of static/DC resistance.[4] Ohm's law is an empirical relation which accurately describes the conductivity of the vast majority of electrically conductive materials over many orders of magnitude of current. However some materials do not obey Ohm's law; these are called non-ohmic.

The law was named after the German physicist Georg Ohm, who, in a treatise published in 1827, described measurements of applied voltage and current through simple electrical circuits containing various lengths of wire. Ohm explained his experimental results by a slightly more complex equation than the modern form above (see § History below).

In physics, the term Ohm's law is also used to refer to various generalizations of the law; for example the vector form of the law used in electromagnetics and material science:

where J is the current density at a given location in a resistive material, E is the electric field at that location, and σ (sigma) is a material-dependent parameter called the conductivity. This reformulation of Ohm's law is due to Gustav Kirchhoff.[5]

History

 
Georg Ohm

In January 1781, before Georg Ohm's work, Henry Cavendish experimented with Leyden jars and glass tubes of varying diameter and length filled with salt solution. He measured the current by noting how strong a shock he felt as he completed the circuit with his body. Cavendish wrote that the "velocity" (current) varied directly as the "degree of electrification" (voltage). He did not communicate his results to other scientists at the time,[6] and his results were unknown until James Clerk Maxwell published them in 1879.[7]

Francis Ronalds delineated "intensity" (voltage) and "quantity" (current) for the dry pile—a high voltage source—in 1814 using a gold-leaf electrometer. He found for a dry pile that the relationship between the two parameters was not proportional under certain meteorological conditions.[8][9]

Ohm did his work on resistance in the years 1825 and 1826, and published his results in 1827 as the book Die galvanische Kette, mathematisch bearbeitet ("The galvanic circuit investigated mathematically").[10] He drew considerable inspiration from Joseph Fourier's work on heat conduction in the theoretical explanation of his work. For experiments, he initially used voltaic piles, but later used a thermocouple as this provided a more stable voltage source in terms of internal resistance and constant voltage. He used a galvanometer to measure current, and knew that the voltage between the thermocouple terminals was proportional to the junction temperature. He then added test wires of varying length, diameter, and material to complete the circuit. He found that his data could be modeled through the equation

 
where x was the reading from the galvanometer, was the length of the test conductor, a depended on the thermocouple junction temperature, and b was a constant of the entire setup. From this, Ohm determined his law of proportionality and published his results.
 
Internal resistance model

In modern notation we would write,

 
where   is the open-circuit emf of the thermocouple,   is the internal resistance of the thermocouple and   is the resistance of the test wire. In terms of the length of the wire this becomes,
 
where   is the resistance of the test wire per unit length. Thus, Ohm's coefficients are,
 
 
Ohm's law in Georg Ohm's lab book.

Ohm's law was probably the most important of the early quantitative descriptions of the physics of electricity. We consider it almost obvious today. When Ohm first published his work, this was not the case; critics reacted to his treatment of the subject with hostility. They called his work a "web of naked fancies"[11] and the Minister of Education proclaimed that "a professor who preached such heresies was unworthy to teach science."[12] The prevailing scientific philosophy in Germany at the time asserted that experiments need not be performed to develop an understanding of nature because nature is so well ordered, and that scientific truths may be deduced through reasoning alone.[13] Also, Ohm's brother Martin, a mathematician, was battling the German educational system. These factors hindered the acceptance of Ohm's work, and his work did not become widely accepted until the 1840s. However, Ohm received recognition for his contributions to science well before he died.

In the 1850s, Ohm's law was widely known and considered proved. Alternatives such as "Barlow's law", were discredited, in terms of real applications to telegraph system design, as discussed by Samuel F. B. Morse in 1855.[14]

The electron was discovered in 1897 by J. J. Thomson, and it was quickly realized that it was the particle (charge carrier) that carried electric currents in electric circuits. In 1900, the first (classical) model of electrical conduction, the Drude model, was proposed by Paul Drude, which finally gave a scientific explanation for Ohm's law. In this model, a solid conductor consists of a stationary lattice of atoms (ions), with conduction electrons moving randomly in it. A voltage across a conductor causes an electric field, which accelerates the electrons in the direction of the electric field, causing a drift of electrons which is the electric current. However the electrons collide with atoms which causes them to scatter and randomizes their motion, thus converting kinetic energy to heat (thermal energy). Using statistical distributions, it can be shown that the average drift velocity of the electrons, and thus the current, is proportional to the electric field, and thus the voltage, over a wide range of voltages.

The development of quantum mechanics in the 1920s modified this picture somewhat, but in modern theories the average drift velocity of electrons can still be shown to be proportional to the electric field, thus deriving Ohm's law. In 1927 Arnold Sommerfeld applied the quantum Fermi-Dirac distribution of electron energies to the Drude model, resulting in the free electron model. A year later, Felix Bloch showed that electrons move in waves (Bloch electrons) through a solid crystal lattice, so scattering off the lattice atoms as postulated in the Drude model is not a major process; the electrons scatter off impurity atoms and defects in the material. The final successor, the modern quantum band theory of solids, showed that the electrons in a solid cannot take on any energy as assumed in the Drude model but are restricted to energy bands, with gaps between them of energies that electrons are forbidden to have. The size of the band gap is a characteristic of a particular substance which has a great deal to do with its electrical resistivity, explaining why some substances are electrical conductors, some semiconductors, and some insulators.

While the old term for electrical conductance, the mho (the inverse of the resistance unit ohm), is still used, a new name, the siemens, was adopted in 1971, honoring Ernst Werner von Siemens. The siemens is preferred in formal papers.

In the 1920s, it was discovered that the current through a practical resistor actually has statistical fluctuations, which depend on temperature, even when voltage and resistance are exactly constant; this fluctuation, now known as Johnson–Nyquist noise, is due to the discrete nature of charge. This thermal effect implies that measurements of current and voltage that are taken over sufficiently short periods of time will yield ratios of V/I that fluctuate from the value of R implied by the time average or ensemble average of the measured current; Ohm's law remains correct for the average current, in the case of ordinary resistive materials.

Ohm's work long preceded Maxwell's equations and any understanding of frequency-dependent effects in AC circuits. Modern developments in electromagnetic theory and circuit theory do not contradict Ohm's law when they are evaluated within the appropriate limits.

Scope

Ohm's law is an empirical law, a generalization from many experiments that have shown that current is approximately proportional to electric field for most materials. It is less fundamental than Maxwell's equations and is not always obeyed. Any given material will break down under a strong-enough electric field, and some materials of interest in electrical engineering are "non-ohmic" under weak fields.[15][16]

Ohm's law has been observed on a wide range of length scales. In the early 20th century, it was thought that Ohm's law would fail at the atomic scale, but experiments have not borne out this expectation. As of 2012, researchers have demonstrated that Ohm's law works for silicon wires as small as four atoms wide and one atom high.[17]

Microscopic origins

 
Drude Model electrons (shown here in blue) constantly bounce among heavier, stationary crystal ions (shown in red).

The dependence of the current density on the applied electric field is essentially quantum mechanical in nature; (see Classical and quantum conductivity.) A qualitative description leading to Ohm's law can be based upon classical mechanics using the Drude model developed by Paul Drude in 1900.[18][19]

The Drude model treats electrons (or other charge carriers) like pinballs bouncing among the ions that make up the structure of the material. Electrons will be accelerated in the opposite direction to the electric field by the average electric field at their location. With each collision, though, the electron is deflected in a random direction with a velocity that is much larger than the velocity gained by the electric field. The net result is that electrons take a zigzag path due to the collisions, but generally drift in a direction opposing the electric field.

The drift velocity then determines the electric current density and its relationship to E and is independent of the collisions. Drude calculated the average drift velocity from p = −eEτ where p is the average momentum, −e is the charge of the electron and τ is the average time between the collisions. Since both the momentum and the current density are proportional to the drift velocity, the current density becomes proportional to the applied electric field; this leads to Ohm's law.

Hydraulic analogy

A hydraulic analogy is sometimes used to describe Ohm's law. Water pressure, measured by pascals (or PSI), is the analog of voltage because establishing a water pressure difference between two points along a (horizontal) pipe causes water to flow. The water volume flow rate, as in liters per second, is the analog of current, as in coulombs per second. Finally, flow restrictors—such as apertures placed in pipes between points where the water pressure is measured—are the analog of resistors. We say that the rate of water flow through an aperture restrictor is proportional to the difference in water pressure across the restrictor. Similarly, the rate of flow of electrical charge, that is, the electric current, through an electrical resistor is proportional to the difference in voltage measured across the resistor. More generally, the hydraulic head may be taken as the analog of voltage, and Ohm's law is then analogous to Darcy's law which relates hydraulic head to the volume flow rate via the hydraulic conductivity.

Flow and pressure variables can be calculated in fluid flow network with the use of the hydraulic ohm analogy.[20][21] The method can be applied to both steady and transient flow situations. In the linear laminar flow region, Poiseuille's law describes the hydraulic resistance of a pipe, but in the turbulent flow region the pressure–flow relations become nonlinear.

The hydraulic analogy to Ohm's law has been used, for example, to approximate blood flow through the circulatory system.[22]

Circuit analysis

 
Covering the unknown in the Ohm's law image mnemonic gives the formula in terms of the remaining parameters
 
Ohm's law wheel with international unit symbols

In circuit analysis, three equivalent expressions of Ohm's law are used interchangeably:

 

Each equation is quoted by some sources as the defining relationship of Ohm's law,[2][23][24] or all three are quoted,[25] or derived from a proportional form,[26] or even just the two that do not correspond to Ohm's original statement may sometimes be given.[27][28]

The interchangeability of the equation may be represented by a triangle, where V (voltage) is placed on the top section, the I (current) is placed to the left section, and the R (resistance) is placed to the right. The divider between the top and bottom sections indicates division (hence the division bar).

Resistive circuits

Resistors are circuit elements that impede the passage of electric charge in agreement with Ohm's law, and are designed to have a specific resistance value R. In schematic diagrams, a resistor is shown as a long rectangle or zig-zag symbol. An element (resistor or conductor) that behaves according to Ohm's law over some operating range is referred to as an ohmic device (or an ohmic resistor) because Ohm's law and a single value for the resistance suffice to describe the behavior of the device over that range.

Ohm's law holds for circuits containing only resistive elements (no capacitances or inductances) for all forms of driving voltage or current, regardless of whether the driving voltage or current is constant (DC) or time-varying such as AC. At any instant of time Ohm's law is valid for such circuits.

Resistors which are in series or in parallel may be grouped together into a single "equivalent resistance" in order to apply Ohm's law in analyzing the circuit.

Reactive circuits with time-varying signals

When reactive elements such as capacitors, inductors, or transmission lines are involved in a circuit to which AC or time-varying voltage or current is applied, the relationship between voltage and current becomes the solution to a differential equation, so Ohm's law (as defined above) does not directly apply since that form contains only resistances having value R, not complex impedances which may contain capacitance (C) or inductance (L).

Equations for time-invariant AC circuits take the same form as Ohm's law. However, the variables are generalized to complex numbers and the current and voltage waveforms are complex exponentials.[29]

In this approach, a voltage or current waveform takes the form Aest, where t is time, s is a complex parameter, and A is a complex scalar. In any linear time-invariant system, all of the currents and voltages can be expressed with the same s parameter as the input to the system, allowing the time-varying complex exponential term to be canceled out and the system described algebraically in terms of the complex scalars in the current and voltage waveforms.

The complex generalization of resistance is impedance, usually denoted Z; it can be shown that for an inductor,

 
and for a capacitor,
 

We can now write,

 
where V and I are the complex scalars in the voltage and current respectively and Z is the complex impedance.

This form of Ohm's law, with Z taking the place of R, generalizes the simpler form. When Z is complex, only the real part is responsible for dissipating heat.

In a general AC circuit, Z varies strongly with the frequency parameter s, and so also will the relationship between voltage and current.

For the common case of a steady sinusoid, the s parameter is taken to be  , corresponding to a complex sinusoid  . The real parts of such complex current and voltage waveforms describe the actual sinusoidal currents and voltages in a circuit, which can be in different phases due to the different complex scalars.

Linear approximations

Ohm's law is one of the basic equations used in the analysis of electrical circuits. It applies to both metal conductors and circuit components (resistors) specifically made for this behaviour. Both are ubiquitous in electrical engineering. Materials and components that obey Ohm's law are described as "ohmic"[30] which means they produce the same value for resistance (R = V/I) regardless of the value of V or I which is applied and whether the applied voltage or current is DC (direct current) of either positive or negative polarity or AC (alternating current).

In a true ohmic device, the same value of resistance will be calculated from R = V/I regardless of the value of the applied voltage V. That is, the ratio of V/I is constant, and when current is plotted as a function of voltage the curve is linear (a straight line). If voltage is forced to some value V, then that voltage V divided by measured current I will equal R. Or if the current is forced to some value I, then the measured voltage V divided by that current I is also R. Since the plot of I versus V is a straight line, then it is also true that for any set of two different voltages V1 and V2 applied across a given device of resistance R, producing currents I1 = V1/R and I2 = V2/R, that the ratio (V1V2)/(I1I2) is also a constant equal to R. The operator "delta" (Δ) is used to represent a difference in a quantity, so we can write ΔV = V1V2 and ΔI = I1I2. Summarizing, for any truly ohmic device having resistance R, V/I = ΔVI = R for any applied voltage or current or for the difference between any set of applied voltages or currents.

 
The IV curves of four devices: Two resistors, a diode, and a battery. The two resistors follow Ohm's law: The plot is a straight line through the origin. The other two devices do not follow Ohm's law.

There are, however, components of electrical circuits which do not obey Ohm's law; that is, their relationship between current and voltage (their IV curve) is nonlinear (or non-ohmic). An example is the p–n junction diode (curve at right). As seen in the figure, the current does not increase linearly with applied voltage for a diode. One can determine a value of current (I) for a given value of applied voltage (V) from the curve, but not from Ohm's law, since the value of "resistance" is not constant as a function of applied voltage. Further, the current only increases significantly if the applied voltage is positive, not negative. The ratio V/I for some point along the nonlinear curve is sometimes called the static, or chordal, or DC, resistance,[31][32] but as seen in the figure the value of total V over total I varies depending on the particular point along the nonlinear curve which is chosen. This means the "DC resistance" V/I at some point on the curve is not the same as what would be determined by applying an AC signal having peak amplitude ΔV volts or ΔI amps centered at that same point along the curve and measuring ΔVI. However, in some diode applications, the AC signal applied to the device is small and it is possible to analyze the circuit in terms of the dynamic, small-signal, or incremental resistance, defined as the one over the slope of the VI curve at the average value (DC operating point) of the voltage (that is, one over the derivative of current with respect to voltage). For sufficiently small signals, the dynamic resistance allows the Ohm's law small signal resistance to be calculated as approximately one over the slope of a line drawn tangentially to the VI curve at the DC operating point.[33]

Temperature effects

Ohm's law has sometimes been stated as, "for a conductor in a given state, the electromotive force is proportional to the current produced. "That is, that the resistance, the ratio of the applied electromotive force (or voltage) to the current, "does not vary with the current strength."The qualifier "in a given state" is usually interpreted as meaning "at a constant temperature," since the resistivity of materials is usually temperature dependent. Because the conduction of current is related to Joule heating of the conducting body, according to Joule's first law, the temperature of a conducting body may change when it carries a current. The dependence of resistance on temperature therefore makes resistance depend upon the current in a typical experimental setup, making the law in this form difficult to directly verify. Maxwell and others worked out several methods to test the law experimentally in 1876, controlling for heating effects.[34] Usually, the measurements of a sample resistance are carried out at low currents to prevent Joule heating. However, even a small current causes heating(cooling) at the first(second) sample contact due to the Peltier effect. The temperatures at the sample contacts become different, their difference is linear in current. The voltage drop across the circuit includes additionally the Seebeck thermoelectromotive force which again is again linear in current. As a result, there exists a thermal correction to the sample resistance even at negligibly small current.[35] The magnitude of the correction could be comparable with the sample resistance.[36]

Relation to heat conductions

Ohm's principle predicts the flow of electrical charge (i.e. current) in electrical conductors when subjected to the influence of voltage differences; Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fourier's principle predicts the flow of heat in heat conductors when subjected to the influence of temperature differences.

The same equation describes both phenomena, the equation's variables taking on different meanings in the two cases. Specifically, solving a heat conduction (Fourier) problem with temperature (the driving "force") and flux of heat (the rate of flow of the driven "quantity", i.e. heat energy) variables also solves an analogous electrical conduction (Ohm) problem having electric potential (the driving "force") and electric current (the rate of flow of the driven "quantity", i.e. charge) variables.

The basis of Fourier's work was his clear conception and definition of thermal conductivity. He assumed that, all else being the same, the flux of heat is strictly proportional to the gradient of temperature. Although undoubtedly true for small temperature gradients, strictly proportional behavior will be lost when real materials (e.g. ones having a thermal conductivity that is a function of temperature) are subjected to large temperature gradients.

A similar assumption is made in the statement of Ohm's law: other things being alike, the strength of the current at each point is proportional to the gradient of electric potential. The accuracy of the assumption that flow is proportional to the gradient is more readily tested, using modern measurement methods, for the electrical case than for the heat case.

Other versions

Ohm's law, in the form above, is an extremely useful equation in the field of electrical/electronic engineering because it describes how voltage, current and resistance are interrelated on a "macroscopic" level, that is, commonly, as circuit elements in an electrical circuit. Physicists who study the electrical properties of matter at the microscopic level use a closely related and more general vector equation, sometimes also referred to as Ohm's law, having variables that are closely related to the V, I, and R scalar variables of Ohm's law, but which are each functions of position within the conductor. Physicists often use this continuum form of Ohm's Law:[37]

 

where E is the electric field vector with units of volts per meter (analogous to V of Ohm's law which has units of volts), J is the current density vector with units of amperes per unit area (analogous to I of Ohm's law which has units of amperes), and ρ "rho" is the resistivity with units of ohm·meters (analogous to R of Ohm's law which has units of ohms). The above equation is also written[38] as J = σE where σ "sigma" is the conductivity which is the reciprocal of ρ.

 
Current flowing through a uniform cylindrical conductor (such as a round wire) with a uniform field applied.

The voltage between two points is defined as:[39]

 
with   the element of path along the integration of electric field vector E. If the applied E field is uniform and oriented along the length of the conductor as shown in the figure, then defining the voltage V in the usual convention of being opposite in direction to the field (see figure), and with the understanding that the voltage V is measured differentially across the length of the conductor allowing us to drop the Δ symbol, the above vector equation reduces to the scalar equation:
 

Since the E field is uniform in the direction of wire length, for a conductor having uniformly consistent resistivity ρ, the current density J will also be uniform in any cross-sectional area and oriented in the direction of wire length, so we may write:[40]

 

Substituting the above 2 results (for E and J respectively) into the continuum form shown at the beginning of this section:

 

The electrical resistance of a uniform conductor is given in terms of resistivity by:[40]

 
where is the length of the conductor in SI units of meters, a is the cross-sectional area (for a round wire a = πr2 if r is radius) in units of meters squared, and ρ is the resistivity in units of ohm·meters.

After substitution of R from the above equation into the equation preceding it, the continuum form of Ohm's law for a uniform field (and uniform current density) oriented along the length of the conductor reduces to the more familiar form:

 

A perfect crystal lattice, with low enough thermal motion and no deviations from periodic structure, would have no resistivity,[41] but a real metal has crystallographic defects, impurities, multiple isotopes, and thermal motion of the atoms. Electrons scatter from all of these, resulting in resistance to their flow.

The more complex generalized forms of Ohm's law are important to condensed matter physics, which studies the properties of matter and, in particular, its electronic structure. In broad terms, they fall under the topic of constitutive equations and the theory of transport coefficients.

Magnetic effects

If an external B-field is present and the conductor is not at rest but moving at velocity v, then an extra term must be added to account for the current induced by the Lorentz force on the charge carriers.

 

In the rest frame of the moving conductor this term drops out because v = 0. There is no contradiction because the electric field in the rest frame differs from the E-field in the lab frame: E′ = E + v × B. Electric and magnetic fields are relative, see Lorentz transformation.

If the current J is alternating because the applied voltage or E-field varies in time, then reactance must be added to resistance to account for self-inductance, see electrical impedance. The reactance may be strong if the frequency is high or the conductor is coiled.

Conductive fluids

In a conductive fluid, such as a plasma, there is a similar effect. Consider a fluid moving with the velocity   in a magnetic field  . The relative motion induces an electric field   which exerts electric force on the charged particles giving rise to an electric current  . The equation of motion for the electron gas, with a number density  , is written as

 

where  ,   and   are the charge, mass and velocity of the electrons, respectively. Also,   is the frequency of collisions of the electrons with ions which have a velocity field  . Since, the electron has a very small mass compared with that of ions, we can ignore the left hand side of the above equation to write

 

where we have used the definition of the current density, and also put   which is the electrical conductivity. This equation can also be equivalently written as

 
where   is the electrical resistivity. It is also common to write   instead of   which can be confusing since it is the same notation used for the magnetic diffusivity defined as  .

See also

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  37. ^ Lerner, Lawrence S. (1977). Physics for scientists and engineers. Jones & Bartlett. p. 736. ISBN 978-0-7637-0460-5.
  38. ^ Seymour J, Physical Electronics, Pitman, 1972, pp. 53–54
  39. ^ Lerner L, Physics for scientists and engineers, Jones & Bartlett, 1997, pp. 685–686
  40. ^ a b Lerner L, Physics for scientists and engineers, Jones & Bartlett, 1997, pp. 732–733
  41. ^ Seymour J, Physical Electronics, pp. 48–49, Pitman, 1972

Further reading

  • Ohm's Law chapter from Lessons In Electric Circuits Vol 1 DC book and series.
  • John C. Shedd and Mayo D. Hershey,"The History of Ohm's Law", Popular Science, December 1913, pp. 599–614, Bonnier Corporation ISSN 0161-7370, gives the history of Ohm's investigations, prior work, Ohm's false equation in the first paper, illustration of Ohm's experimental apparatus.
  • Schagrin, Morton L. (1963). "Resistance to Ohm's Law". American Journal of Physics. 31 (7): 536–547. Bibcode:1963AmJPh..31..536S. doi:10.1119/1.1969620. S2CID 120421759. Explores the conceptual change underlying Ohm's experimental work.
  • Kenneth L. Caneva, "Ohm, Georg Simon." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008
  • s:Scientific Memoirs/2/The Galvanic Circuit investigated Mathematically, a translation of Ohm's original paper.

External links

    this, article, about, related, electricity, other, uses, acoustic, states, that, electric, current, through, conductor, between, points, directly, proportional, voltage, across, points, introducing, constant, proportionality, resistance, arrives, three, mathem. This article is about the law related to electricity For other uses see Ohm s acoustic law Ohm s law states that the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points Introducing the constant of proportionality the resistance 1 one arrives at the three mathematical equations used to describe this relationship 2 V I and R the parameters of Ohm s law V I R or I V R or R V I displaystyle V IR quad text or quad I frac V R quad text or quad R frac V I where I is the current through the conductor V is the voltage measured across the conductor and R is the resistance of the conductor More specifically Ohm s law states that the R in this relation is constant independent of the current 3 If the resistance is not constant the previous equation cannot be called Ohm s law but it can still be used as a definition of static DC resistance 4 Ohm s law is an empirical relation which accurately describes the conductivity of the vast majority of electrically conductive materials over many orders of magnitude of current However some materials do not obey Ohm s law these are called non ohmic The law was named after the German physicist Georg Ohm who in a treatise published in 1827 described measurements of applied voltage and current through simple electrical circuits containing various lengths of wire Ohm explained his experimental results by a slightly more complex equation than the modern form above see History below In physics the term Ohm s law is also used to refer to various generalizations of the law for example the vector form of the law used in electromagnetics and material science J s E displaystyle mathbf J sigma mathbf E where J is the current density at a given location in a resistive material E is the electric field at that location and s sigma is a material dependent parameter called the conductivity This reformulation of Ohm s law is due to Gustav Kirchhoff 5 Contents 1 History 2 Scope 3 Microscopic origins 4 Hydraulic analogy 5 Circuit analysis 5 1 Resistive circuits 5 2 Reactive circuits with time varying signals 5 3 Linear approximations 6 Temperature effects 7 Relation to heat conductions 8 Other versions 8 1 Magnetic effects 8 2 Conductive fluids 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory nbsp Georg Ohm In January 1781 before Georg Ohm s work Henry Cavendish experimented with Leyden jars and glass tubes of varying diameter and length filled with salt solution He measured the current by noting how strong a shock he felt as he completed the circuit with his body Cavendish wrote that the velocity current varied directly as the degree of electrification voltage He did not communicate his results to other scientists at the time 6 and his results were unknown until James Clerk Maxwell published them in 1879 7 Francis Ronalds delineated intensity voltage and quantity current for the dry pile a high voltage source in 1814 using a gold leaf electrometer He found for a dry pile that the relationship between the two parameters was not proportional under certain meteorological conditions 8 9 Ohm did his work on resistance in the years 1825 and 1826 and published his results in 1827 as the book Die galvanische Kette mathematisch bearbeitet The galvanic circuit investigated mathematically 10 He drew considerable inspiration from Joseph Fourier s work on heat conduction in the theoretical explanation of his work For experiments he initially used voltaic piles but later used a thermocouple as this provided a more stable voltage source in terms of internal resistance and constant voltage He used a galvanometer to measure current and knew that the voltage between the thermocouple terminals was proportional to the junction temperature He then added test wires of varying length diameter and material to complete the circuit He found that his data could be modeled through the equationx a b ℓ displaystyle x frac a b ell nbsp where x was the reading from the galvanometer ℓ was the length of the test conductor a depended on the thermocouple junction temperature and b was a constant of the entire setup From this Ohm determined his law of proportionality and published his results nbsp Internal resistance model In modern notation we would write I E r R displaystyle I frac mathcal E r R nbsp where E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp is the open circuit emf of the thermocouple r displaystyle r nbsp is the internal resistance of the thermocouple and R displaystyle R nbsp is the resistance of the test wire In terms of the length of the wire this becomes I E r R ℓ displaystyle I frac mathcal E r mathcal R ell nbsp where R displaystyle mathcal R nbsp is the resistance of the test wire per unit length Thus Ohm s coefficients are a E R b r R displaystyle a frac mathcal E mathcal R quad b frac mathcal r mathcal R nbsp nbsp Ohm s law in Georg Ohm s lab book Ohm s law was probably the most important of the early quantitative descriptions of the physics of electricity We consider it almost obvious today When Ohm first published his work this was not the case critics reacted to his treatment of the subject with hostility They called his work a web of naked fancies 11 and the Minister of Education proclaimed that a professor who preached such heresies was unworthy to teach science 12 The prevailing scientific philosophy in Germany at the time asserted that experiments need not be performed to develop an understanding of nature because nature is so well ordered and that scientific truths may be deduced through reasoning alone 13 Also Ohm s brother Martin a mathematician was battling the German educational system These factors hindered the acceptance of Ohm s work and his work did not become widely accepted until the 1840s However Ohm received recognition for his contributions to science well before he died In the 1850s Ohm s law was widely known and considered proved Alternatives such as Barlow s law were discredited in terms of real applications to telegraph system design as discussed by Samuel F B Morse in 1855 14 The electron was discovered in 1897 by J J Thomson and it was quickly realized that it was the particle charge carrier that carried electric currents in electric circuits In 1900 the first classical model of electrical conduction the Drude model was proposed by Paul Drude which finally gave a scientific explanation for Ohm s law In this model a solid conductor consists of a stationary lattice of atoms ions with conduction electrons moving randomly in it A voltage across a conductor causes an electric field which accelerates the electrons in the direction of the electric field causing a drift of electrons which is the electric current However the electrons collide with atoms which causes them to scatter and randomizes their motion thus converting kinetic energy to heat thermal energy Using statistical distributions it can be shown that the average drift velocity of the electrons and thus the current is proportional to the electric field and thus the voltage over a wide range of voltages The development of quantum mechanics in the 1920s modified this picture somewhat but in modern theories the average drift velocity of electrons can still be shown to be proportional to the electric field thus deriving Ohm s law In 1927 Arnold Sommerfeld applied the quantum Fermi Dirac distribution of electron energies to the Drude model resulting in the free electron model A year later Felix Bloch showed that electrons move in waves Bloch electrons through a solid crystal lattice so scattering off the lattice atoms as postulated in the Drude model is not a major process the electrons scatter off impurity atoms and defects in the material The final successor the modern quantum band theory of solids showed that the electrons in a solid cannot take on any energy as assumed in the Drude model but are restricted to energy bands with gaps between them of energies that electrons are forbidden to have The size of the band gap is a characteristic of a particular substance which has a great deal to do with its electrical resistivity explaining why some substances are electrical conductors some semiconductors and some insulators While the old term for electrical conductance the mho the inverse of the resistance unit ohm is still used a new name the siemens was adopted in 1971 honoring Ernst Werner von Siemens The siemens is preferred in formal papers In the 1920s it was discovered that the current through a practical resistor actually has statistical fluctuations which depend on temperature even when voltage and resistance are exactly constant this fluctuation now known as Johnson Nyquist noise is due to the discrete nature of charge This thermal effect implies that measurements of current and voltage that are taken over sufficiently short periods of time will yield ratios of V I that fluctuate from the value of R implied by the time average or ensemble average of the measured current Ohm s law remains correct for the average current in the case of ordinary resistive materials Ohm s work long preceded Maxwell s equations and any understanding of frequency dependent effects in AC circuits Modern developments in electromagnetic theory and circuit theory do not contradict Ohm s law when they are evaluated within the appropriate limits ScopeOhm s law is an empirical law a generalization from many experiments that have shown that current is approximately proportional to electric field for most materials It is less fundamental than Maxwell s equations and is not always obeyed Any given material will break down under a strong enough electric field and some materials of interest in electrical engineering are non ohmic under weak fields 15 16 Ohm s law has been observed on a wide range of length scales In the early 20th century it was thought that Ohm s law would fail at the atomic scale but experiments have not borne out this expectation As of 2012 researchers have demonstrated that Ohm s law works for silicon wires as small as four atoms wide and one atom high 17 Microscopic origins nbsp Drude Model electrons shown here in blue constantly bounce among heavier stationary crystal ions shown in red Main article Drude model The dependence of the current density on the applied electric field is essentially quantum mechanical in nature see Classical and quantum conductivity A qualitative description leading to Ohm s law can be based upon classical mechanics using the Drude model developed by Paul Drude in 1900 18 19 The Drude model treats electrons or other charge carriers like pinballs bouncing among the ions that make up the structure of the material Electrons will be accelerated in the opposite direction to the electric field by the average electric field at their location With each collision though the electron is deflected in a random direction with a velocity that is much larger than the velocity gained by the electric field The net result is that electrons take a zigzag path due to the collisions but generally drift in a direction opposing the electric field The drift velocity then determines the electric current density and its relationship to E and is independent of the collisions Drude calculated the average drift velocity from p eEt where p is the average momentum e is the charge of the electron and t is the average time between the collisions Since both the momentum and the current density are proportional to the drift velocity the current density becomes proportional to the applied electric field this leads to Ohm s law Hydraulic analogyA hydraulic analogy is sometimes used to describe Ohm s law Water pressure measured by pascals or PSI is the analog of voltage because establishing a water pressure difference between two points along a horizontal pipe causes water to flow The water volume flow rate as in liters per second is the analog of current as in coulombs per second Finally flow restrictors such as apertures placed in pipes between points where the water pressure is measured are the analog of resistors We say that the rate of water flow through an aperture restrictor is proportional to the difference in water pressure across the restrictor Similarly the rate of flow of electrical charge that is the electric current through an electrical resistor is proportional to the difference in voltage measured across the resistor More generally the hydraulic head may be taken as the analog of voltage and Ohm s law is then analogous to Darcy s law which relates hydraulic head to the volume flow rate via the hydraulic conductivity Flow and pressure variables can be calculated in fluid flow network with the use of the hydraulic ohm analogy 20 21 The method can be applied to both steady and transient flow situations In the linear laminar flow region Poiseuille s law describes the hydraulic resistance of a pipe but in the turbulent flow region the pressure flow relations become nonlinear The hydraulic analogy to Ohm s law has been used for example to approximate blood flow through the circulatory system 22 Circuit analysis nbsp Covering the unknown in the Ohm s law image mnemonic gives the formula in terms of the remaining parameters nbsp Ohm s law wheel with international unit symbols In circuit analysis three equivalent expressions of Ohm s law are used interchangeably I V R or V I R or R V I displaystyle I frac V R quad text or quad V IR quad text or quad R frac V I nbsp Each equation is quoted by some sources as the defining relationship of Ohm s law 2 23 24 or all three are quoted 25 or derived from a proportional form 26 or even just the two that do not correspond to Ohm s original statement may sometimes be given 27 28 The interchangeability of the equation may be represented by a triangle where V voltage is placed on the top section the I current is placed to the left section and the R resistance is placed to the right The divider between the top and bottom sections indicates division hence the division bar Resistive circuits Resistors are circuit elements that impede the passage of electric charge in agreement with Ohm s law and are designed to have a specific resistance value R In schematic diagrams a resistor is shown as a long rectangle or zig zag symbol An element resistor or conductor that behaves according to Ohm s law over some operating range is referred to as an ohmic device or an ohmic resistor because Ohm s law and a single value for the resistance suffice to describe the behavior of the device over that range Ohm s law holds for circuits containing only resistive elements no capacitances or inductances for all forms of driving voltage or current regardless of whether the driving voltage or current is constant DC or time varying such as AC At any instant of time Ohm s law is valid for such circuits Resistors which are in series or in parallel may be grouped together into a single equivalent resistance in order to apply Ohm s law in analyzing the circuit Reactive circuits with time varying signals When reactive elements such as capacitors inductors or transmission lines are involved in a circuit to which AC or time varying voltage or current is applied the relationship between voltage and current becomes the solution to a differential equation so Ohm s law as defined above does not directly apply since that form contains only resistances having value R not complex impedances which may contain capacitance C or inductance L Equations for time invariant AC circuits take the same form as Ohm s law However the variables are generalized to complex numbers and the current and voltage waveforms are complex exponentials 29 In this approach a voltage or current waveform takes the form Aest where t is time s is a complex parameter and A is a complex scalar In any linear time invariant system all of the currents and voltages can be expressed with the same s parameter as the input to the system allowing the time varying complex exponential term to be canceled out and the system described algebraically in terms of the complex scalars in the current and voltage waveforms The complex generalization of resistance is impedance usually denoted Z it can be shown that for an inductor Z s L displaystyle Z sL nbsp and for a capacitor Z 1 s C displaystyle Z frac 1 sC nbsp We can now write V Z I displaystyle V Z I nbsp where V and I are the complex scalars in the voltage and current respectively and Z is the complex impedance This form of Ohm s law with Z taking the place of R generalizes the simpler form When Z is complex only the real part is responsible for dissipating heat In a general AC circuit Z varies strongly with the frequency parameter s and so also will the relationship between voltage and current For the common case of a steady sinusoid the s parameter is taken to be j w displaystyle j omega nbsp corresponding to a complex sinusoid A e j w t displaystyle Ae mbox j omega t nbsp The real parts of such complex current and voltage waveforms describe the actual sinusoidal currents and voltages in a circuit which can be in different phases due to the different complex scalars Linear approximations See also Small signal modeling and Network analysis electrical circuits Small signal equivalent circuit Ohm s law is one of the basic equations used in the analysis of electrical circuits It applies to both metal conductors and circuit components resistors specifically made for this behaviour Both are ubiquitous in electrical engineering Materials and components that obey Ohm s law are described as ohmic 30 which means they produce the same value for resistance R V I regardless of the value of V or I which is applied and whether the applied voltage or current is DC direct current of either positive or negative polarity or AC alternating current In a true ohmic device the same value of resistance will be calculated from R V I regardless of the value of the applied voltage V That is the ratio of V I is constant and when current is plotted as a function of voltage the curve is linear a straight line If voltage is forced to some value V then that voltage V divided by measured current I will equal R Or if the current is forced to some value I then the measured voltage V divided by that current I is also R Since the plot of I versus V is a straight line then it is also true that for any set of two different voltages V1 and V2 applied across a given device of resistance R producing currents I1 V1 R and I2 V2 R that the ratio V1 V2 I1 I2 is also a constant equal to R The operator delta D is used to represent a difference in a quantity so we can write DV V1 V2 and DI I1 I2 Summarizing for any truly ohmic device having resistance R V I DV DI R for any applied voltage or current or for the difference between any set of applied voltages or currents nbsp The I V curves of four devices Two resistors a diode and a battery The two resistors follow Ohm s law The plot is a straight line through the origin The other two devices do not follow Ohm s law There are however components of electrical circuits which do not obey Ohm s law that is their relationship between current and voltage their I V curve is nonlinear or non ohmic An example is the p n junction diode curve at right As seen in the figure the current does not increase linearly with applied voltage for a diode One can determine a value of current I for a given value of applied voltage V from the curve but not from Ohm s law since the value of resistance is not constant as a function of applied voltage Further the current only increases significantly if the applied voltage is positive not negative The ratio V I for some point along the nonlinear curve is sometimes called the static or chordal or DC resistance 31 32 but as seen in the figure the value of total V over total I varies depending on the particular point along the nonlinear curve which is chosen This means the DC resistance V I at some point on the curve is not the same as what would be determined by applying an AC signal having peak amplitude DV volts or DI amps centered at that same point along the curve and measuring DV DI However in some diode applications the AC signal applied to the device is small and it is possible to analyze the circuit in terms of the dynamic small signal or incremental resistance defined as the one over the slope of the V I curve at the average value DC operating point of the voltage that is one over the derivative of current with respect to voltage For sufficiently small signals the dynamic resistance allows the Ohm s law small signal resistance to be calculated as approximately one over the slope of a line drawn tangentially to the V I curve at the DC operating point 33 Temperature effectsOhm s law has sometimes been stated as for a conductor in a given state the electromotive force is proportional to the current produced That is that the resistance the ratio of the applied electromotive force or voltage to the current does not vary with the current strength The qualifier in a given state is usually interpreted as meaning at a constant temperature since the resistivity of materials is usually temperature dependent Because the conduction of current is related to Joule heating of the conducting body according to Joule s first law the temperature of a conducting body may change when it carries a current The dependence of resistance on temperature therefore makes resistance depend upon the current in a typical experimental setup making the law in this form difficult to directly verify Maxwell and others worked out several methods to test the law experimentally in 1876 controlling for heating effects 34 Usually the measurements of a sample resistance are carried out at low currents to prevent Joule heating However even a small current causes heating cooling at the first second sample contact due to the Peltier effect The temperatures at the sample contacts become different their difference is linear in current The voltage drop across the circuit includes additionally the Seebeck thermoelectromotive force which again is again linear in current As a result there exists a thermal correction to the sample resistance even at negligibly small current 35 The magnitude of the correction could be comparable with the sample resistance 36 Relation to heat conductionsSee also Conduction heat Ohm s principle predicts the flow of electrical charge i e current in electrical conductors when subjected to the influence of voltage differences Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier s principle predicts the flow of heat in heat conductors when subjected to the influence of temperature differences The same equation describes both phenomena the equation s variables taking on different meanings in the two cases Specifically solving a heat conduction Fourier problem with temperature the driving force and flux of heat the rate of flow of the driven quantity i e heat energy variables also solves an analogous electrical conduction Ohm problem having electric potential the driving force and electric current the rate of flow of the driven quantity i e charge variables The basis of Fourier s work was his clear conception and definition of thermal conductivity He assumed that all else being the same the flux of heat is strictly proportional to the gradient of temperature Although undoubtedly true for small temperature gradients strictly proportional behavior will be lost when real materials e g ones having a thermal conductivity that is a function of temperature are subjected to large temperature gradients A similar assumption is made in the statement of Ohm s law other things being alike the strength of the current at each point is proportional to the gradient of electric potential The accuracy of the assumption that flow is proportional to the gradient is more readily tested using modern measurement methods for the electrical case than for the heat case Other versionsOhm s law in the form above is an extremely useful equation in the field of electrical electronic engineering because it describes how voltage current and resistance are interrelated on a macroscopic level that is commonly as circuit elements in an electrical circuit Physicists who study the electrical properties of matter at the microscopic level use a closely related and more general vector equation sometimes also referred to as Ohm s law having variables that are closely related to the V I and R scalar variables of Ohm s law but which are each functions of position within the conductor Physicists often use this continuum form of Ohm s Law 37 E r J displaystyle mathbf E rho mathbf J nbsp where E is the electric field vector with units of volts per meter analogous to V of Ohm s law which has units of volts J is the current density vector with units of amperes per unit area analogous to I of Ohm s law which has units of amperes and r rho is the resistivity with units of ohm meters analogous to R of Ohm s law which has units of ohms The above equation is also written 38 as J sE where s sigma is the conductivity which is the reciprocal of r nbsp Current flowing through a uniform cylindrical conductor such as a round wire with a uniform field applied The voltage between two points is defined as 39 D V E d ℓ displaystyle Delta V int mathbf E cdot d boldsymbol ell nbsp with d ℓ displaystyle d boldsymbol ell nbsp the element of path along the integration of electric field vector E If the applied E field is uniform and oriented along the length of the conductor as shown in the figure then defining the voltage V in the usual convention of being opposite in direction to the field see figure and with the understanding that the voltage V is measured differentially across the length of the conductor allowing us to drop the D symbol the above vector equation reduces to the scalar equation V E ℓ or E V ℓ displaystyle V E ell text or E frac V ell nbsp Since the E field is uniform in the direction of wire length for a conductor having uniformly consistent resistivity r the current density J will also be uniform in any cross sectional area and oriented in the direction of wire length so we may write 40 J I a displaystyle J frac I a nbsp Substituting the above 2 results for E and J respectively into the continuum form shown at the beginning of this section V ℓ I a r or V I r ℓ a displaystyle frac V ell frac I a rho qquad text or qquad V I rho frac ell a nbsp The electrical resistance of a uniform conductor is given in terms of resistivity by 40 R r ℓ a displaystyle R rho frac ell a nbsp where ℓ is the length of the conductor in SI units of meters a is the cross sectional area for a round wire a pr2 if r is radius in units of meters squared and r is the resistivity in units of ohm meters After substitution of R from the above equation into the equation preceding it the continuum form of Ohm s law for a uniform field and uniform current density oriented along the length of the conductor reduces to the more familiar form V I R displaystyle V IR nbsp A perfect crystal lattice with low enough thermal motion and no deviations from periodic structure would have no resistivity 41 but a real metal has crystallographic defects impurities multiple isotopes and thermal motion of the atoms Electrons scatter from all of these resulting in resistance to their flow The more complex generalized forms of Ohm s law are important to condensed matter physics which studies the properties of matter and in particular its electronic structure In broad terms they fall under the topic of constitutive equations and the theory of transport coefficients Magnetic effects If an external B field is present and the conductor is not at rest but moving at velocity v then an extra term must be added to account for the current induced by the Lorentz force on the charge carriers J s E v B displaystyle mathbf J sigma mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B nbsp In the rest frame of the moving conductor this term drops out because v 0 There is no contradiction because the electric field in the rest frame differs from the E field in the lab frame E E v B Electric and magnetic fields are relative see Lorentz transformation If the current J is alternating because the applied voltage or E field varies in time then reactance must be added to resistance to account for self inductance see electrical impedance The reactance may be strong if the frequency is high or the conductor is coiled Conductive fluids In a conductive fluid such as a plasma there is a similar effect Consider a fluid moving with the velocity v displaystyle mathbf v nbsp in a magnetic field B displaystyle mathbf B nbsp The relative motion induces an electric field E displaystyle mathbf E nbsp which exerts electric force on the charged particles giving rise to an electric current J displaystyle mathbf J nbsp The equation of motion for the electron gas with a number density n e displaystyle n e nbsp is written asm e n e d v e d t n e e E n e m e n v i v e e n e v e B displaystyle m e n e d mathbf v e over dt n e e mathbf E n e m e nu mathbf v i mathbf v e en e mathbf v e times mathbf B nbsp where e displaystyle e nbsp m e displaystyle m e nbsp and v e displaystyle mathbf v e nbsp are the charge mass and velocity of the electrons respectively Also n displaystyle nu nbsp is the frequency of collisions of the electrons with ions which have a velocity field v i displaystyle mathbf v i nbsp Since the electron has a very small mass compared with that of ions we can ignore the left hand side of the above equation to writes E v B J displaystyle sigma mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B mathbf J nbsp where we have used the definition of the current density and also put s n e e 2 n m e displaystyle sigma n e e 2 over nu m e nbsp which is the electrical conductivity This equation can also be equivalently written asE v B r J displaystyle mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B rho mathbf J nbsp where r s 1 displaystyle rho sigma 1 nbsp is the electrical resistivity It is also common to write h displaystyle eta nbsp instead of r displaystyle rho nbsp which can be confusing since it is the same notation used for the magnetic diffusivity defined as h 1 m 0 s displaystyle eta 1 mu 0 sigma nbsp See also nbsp Electronics portal Fick s law of diffusion Hopkinson s law Ohm s law for magnetics Maximum power transfer theorem Norton s theorem Electric power Sheet resistance Superposition theorem Thermal noise Thevenin s theoremReferences Consoliver Earl L amp Mitchell Grover I 1920 Automotive Ignition Systems McGraw Hill p 4 a b Millikan Robert A Bishop E S 1917 Elements of Electricity American Technical Society p 54 Heaviside Oliver 1894 Electrical Papers Vol 1 Macmillan and Co p 283 ISBN 978 0 8218 2840 3 Young Hugh Freedman Roger 2008 Sears and Zemansky s University Physics With Modern Physics Vol 2 12 ed Pearson p 853 ISBN 978 0 321 50121 9 Darrigol Olivier 8 June 2000 Electrodynamics from Ampere to Einstein Clarendon Press p 70 ISBN 9780198505945 Fleming John Ambrose 1911 Electricity In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 182 Bordeau Sanford P 1982 Volts to Hertz the Rise of Electricity From the Compass to the Radio Through the Works of Sixteen Great Men of Science Whose Names are Used in Measuring Electricity and Magnetism Burgess Publishing Company pp 86 107 ISBN 9780808749080 Ronalds B F 2016 Sir Francis Ronalds Father of the Electric Telegraph London Imperial College Press ISBN 978 1 78326 917 4 Ronalds B F July 2016 Francis Ronalds 1788 1873 The First Electrical Engineer Proceedings of the IEEE 104 7 1489 1498 doi 10 1109 JPROC 2016 2571358 S2CID 20662894 Ohm G S 1827 Die galvanische Kette mathematisch bearbeitet PDF Berlin T H Riemann Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 26 Davies Brian 1980 A web of naked fancies Physics Education 15 1 57 61 Bibcode 1980PhyEd 15 57D doi 10 1088 0031 9120 15 1 314 S2CID 250832899 Hart Ivor Blashka 1923 Makers of Science London Oxford University Press p 243 OL 6662681M Schnadelbach Herbert 14 June 1984 Philosophy in Germany 1831 1933 Cambridge University Press pp 78 79 ISBN 9780521296465 Taliaferro Preston 1855 Shaffner s Telegraph Companion Devoted to the Science and Art of the Morse Telegraph Vol 2 Pudney amp Russell Purcell Edward M 1985 Electricity and magnetism Berkeley Physics Course vol 2 2nd ed McGraw Hill p 129 ISBN 978 0 07 004908 6 Griffiths David J 1999 Introduction to electrodynamics 3rd ed Prentice Hall p 289 ISBN 978 0 13 805326 0 Weber B Mahapatra S Ryu H Lee S Fuhrer A Reusch T C G Thompson D L Lee W C T Klimeck G Hollenberg L C L Simmons M Y 2012 Ohm s Law Survives to the Atomic Scale Science 335 6064 64 67 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 64W doi 10 1126 science 1214319 PMID 22223802 S2CID 10873901 Drude Paul 1900 Zur Elektronentheorie der Metalle Annalen der Physik 306 3 566 613 Bibcode 1900AnP 306 566D doi 10 1002 andp 19003060312 dead link Drude Paul 1900 Zur Elektronentheorie der Metalle II Teil Galvanomagnetische und thermomagnetische Effecte Annalen der Physik 308 11 369 402 Bibcode 1900AnP 308 369D doi 10 1002 andp 19003081102 dead link A Akers M Gassman amp R Smith 2006 Hydraulic Power System Analysis New York Taylor amp Francis Chapter 13 ISBN 978 0 8247 9956 4 A Esposito A Simplified Method for Analyzing Circuits by Analogy Machine Design October 1969 pp 173 177 Guyton Arthur Hall John 2006 Chapter 14 Overview of the Circulation Medical Physics of Pressure Flow and Resistance In Gruliow Rebecca ed Textbook of Medical Physiology 11th ed Philadelphia Pennsylvania Elsevier Inc p 164 ISBN 978 0 7216 0240 0 Nilsson James William amp Riedel Susan A 2008 Electric circuits Prentice Hall p 29 ISBN 978 0 13 198925 2 Halpern Alvin M amp Erlbach Erich 1998 Schaum s outline of theory and problems of beginning physics II McGraw Hill Professional p 140 ISBN 978 0 07 025707 8 Patrick Dale R amp Fardo Stephen W 1999 Understanding DC circuits Newnes p 96 ISBN 978 0 7506 7110 1 O Conor Sloane Thomas 1909 Elementary electrical calculations D Van Nostrand Co p 41 R Ohm s law proportional Cumming Linnaeus 1902 Electricity treated experimentally for the use of schools and students Longman s Green and Co p 220 V IR Ohm s law Stein Benjamin 1997 Building technology 2nd ed John Wiley and Sons p 169 ISBN 978 0 471 59319 5 Prasad Rajendra 2006 Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering Prentice Hall of India ISBN 978 81 203 2729 0 Hughes E Electrical Technology pp10 Longmans 1969 Brown Forbes T 2006 Engineering System Dynamics CRC Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 8493 9648 9 Kaiser Kenneth L 2004 Electromagnetic Compatibility Handbook CRC Press pp 13 52 ISBN 978 0 8493 2087 3 Horowitz Paul Hill Winfield 1989 The Art of Electronics 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 521 37095 0 Normal Lockyer ed September 21 1876 Reports Nature 14 360 Macmillan Journals Ltd 451 459 452 Bibcode 1876Natur 14 451 doi 10 1038 014451a0 Kirby C G M Laubitz M J July 1973 The Error Due to the Peltier Effect in Direct Current Measurements of Resistance Metrologia 9 3 103 106 doi 10 1088 0026 1394 9 3 001 ISSN 0026 1394 Cheremisin M V February 2001 Peltier effect induced correction to ohmic resistance Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics 92 2 357 360 arXiv physics 9908060 doi 10 1134 1 1354694 ISSN 1063 7761 Lerner Lawrence S 1977 Physics for scientists and engineers Jones amp Bartlett p 736 ISBN 978 0 7637 0460 5 Seymour J Physical Electronics Pitman 1972 pp 53 54 Lerner L Physics for scientists and engineers Jones amp Bartlett 1997 pp 685 686 a b Lerner L Physics for scientists and engineers Jones amp Bartlett 1997 pp 732 733 Seymour J Physical Electronics pp 48 49 Pitman 1972Further reading nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ohm s law Ohm s Law chapter from Lessons In Electric Circuits Vol 1 DC book and series John C Shedd and Mayo D Hershey The History of Ohm s Law Popular Science December 1913 pp 599 614 Bonnier Corporation ISSN 0161 7370 gives the history of Ohm s investigations prior work Ohm s false equation in the first paper illustration of Ohm s experimental apparatus Schagrin Morton L 1963 Resistance to Ohm s Law American Journal of Physics 31 7 536 547 Bibcode 1963AmJPh 31 536S doi 10 1119 1 1969620 S2CID 120421759 Explores the conceptual change underlying Ohm s experimental work Kenneth L Caneva Ohm Georg Simon Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography 2008 s Scientific Memoirs 2 The Galvanic Circuit investigated Mathematically a translation of Ohm s original paper External linksOhms Law Calculator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ohm 27s law amp oldid 1219732292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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