Ohm's Law: I $=\frac{V}{R}$: Increasing voltage increases current.
Power Law: P $={V}*{I}$: Increasing voltage decreases current.
Am I missing something?
Ohm's Law: I $=\frac{V}{R}$: Increasing voltage increases current.
Power Law: P $={V}*{I}$: Increasing voltage decreases current.
Am I missing something?
Am I missing something?
Yes, you are missing what is held constant in each case.
Ohm's Law: I=V/R. Increasing voltage increases current.
Should read “Increasing voltage increases current for a fixed resistance.”
Power Law: P =𝑉∗𝐼. Increasing voltage decreases current.
Should read “Increasing voltage decreases current for a fixed power.”
The two statements are not contradictory since they refer to different scenarios. Usually resistance is fixed and power is not.
As the others say, you are implicitly holding one factor constant and seeing how the others are related but a different constant factor in each case.
A real world example may help. Consider an old style filament light bulb. It is intended to be used in a $220V$ country and consume $110W$. So, it should draw $0.5A$ and needs a resistance of $440 \Omega$.
We can keep the resistance constant and vary the voltage by taking it to a $110V$ country. Ohm's law tells us that it will now draw only $0.25A$ hence the power will be only $27.5W$.
For the constant power scenario, imagine that the manufacturer wants to make a similar $110W$ bulb for $110V$ countries. He needs it to draw $1A$ so he must arrange for its resistance to be $110 \Omega$. Note that this will be a different bulb.
For some fun, take the bulb intended for $110V$ to a $220V$ country. I leave that as an exercise.
You have missed that power does change since voltage is changing, the easiest way to see it is to rewrite P = VI = V(V/R) = (V^2)/R. So , as you see if voltage is increasing the current is increasing and power is increasing as well.