The Rest of the Story
Keith Dysart wrote:
Perhaps it would help clarify the thinking to plot some voltage-
current
curves.
If we plot V versus I for a resistor (with V on the vertical access)
we
get a line with a slope equal to R. This line passes through the
origin.
For a short, the line is horizontal (i.e. slope and R are zero) and
for
an open the line is vertical (i.e. slope and R are infinite).
Now plot the V-I characteristic of a resistor in series with an ideal
voltage source. Again it is a line with a slope equal to R, but it
does
not pass through the origin, it crosses the vertical axis at the
voltage
provided by the source. So the y-axis crossing is controlled by the
voltage source and the slope is controlled by the resistor. If you
reduce the resistor to zero, you get a horizontal line crossing
the y-axis at the voltage of the source. The line being horizontal
means that no amount of current will change the voltage.
We often talk of resistance as V/I, but there are many situations in
which it is better to think of it as deltaV/deltaI (or, in the limit,
dV/dI); that is, the change in voltage that accompanies a change
in current. This is exactly the slope of the V/I curve at that point
and works for computing resistance regardless of whether there is a
voltage offset present. . .
Anyone interested in learning more about this and its application can
look up "dynamic resistance" on the web or in an appropriate text.
Roy Lewallen, W7EL
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