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Understand power rating in layman terms

I have recently started the chapter of electricity of class 8. I am not understanding the concept of power rating of appliances. When we say that a bulb is rated 220V-100W, which means, according to ...
Sanchit Batra's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

"Why do power lines use high voltage?" Loss in power equal to Current*Voltage? [duplicate]

I define P is the average power. So $P=IV$ and $I=\frac{P}{V}$. $P_{loss}$ I define to be the power loss, which is equal to $I^2R$. Substituting for $I$, $P_{loss} = \frac {P^2R}{V^2}$ So I get that ...
photon's user avatar
  • 93
1 vote
1 answer
124 views

Transformers in Power transmission [duplicate]

Recently I learnt that transformers are used in the national grid to increase the voltage, so we get less current. But my understanding V=IR and by increasing the voltage we get more current, so what ...
Howard Stark's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
229 views

High voltage in transmission line [closed]

I'm trying to understand why high voltage is used in transmission but I seem really confused by the explanations I read. Here's what I could make out: $$P_\text{loss} = \dfrac{ΔV^2}{R_t} = \dfrac{(...
Shub's user avatar
  • 349
21 votes
8 answers
14k views

Why do we reduce only current to prevent power loss? Why not voltage?

In power transmission lines current is kept low and voltage is kept high to reduce the power loss. This is because $P = I^{2}R$ and $P = VI$. In order to reduce power loss we have to reduce $I$ since $...
Plan'k-44's user avatar
  • 335
1 vote
2 answers
40 views

Resistance And Electric Power

In a practice problem A motor rated at 20 A with a voltage of 115V exerts a force of 4900 N over a distance of 10 m in 30 s. Using the formulas $P=VI$ and $P=\frac{Fs}{t}$, we can see that the motor ...
John Doe's user avatar
  • 307
0 votes
1 answer
460 views

Why is the brightness of a light bulb dependant on power?

If: Temperature is a measure of the average (kinetic) energy of the particles which make up some material Power is measure of energy transferred per second (J/s) The temperature of the filament in a ...
spider-web's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
181 views

What does an $x$ Watt bulb actually means?

Let's say I have a 11W bulb in my home, connected to a 220V power supply. What exactly does it mean that this bulb is 11W? As far as I know, the Wattage is determined by the formula $W = V * I$, so it ...
YoavKlein's user avatar
  • 282
0 votes
2 answers
324 views

Why current drops when voltage increases?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubZuSZYVBng&t=329s In the video above the man put a 200 thousands volt ball near a non-charged one and a very tiny current appear between them. But I think with ...
Fizzics's user avatar
  • 59
0 votes
2 answers
154 views

Electrical energy (J) from voltage (V), amperage (A) and exposure duration (s)

I have that the electrical energy $E$ in Joules (J) is equal to $E = time \times current^2 \times resistance$. Reasoning with SI units, we can verify that this equation does return energy values in ...
Antoine's user avatar
  • 101
0 votes
1 answer
273 views

Power and power loss during transmission of power

So let's say power to be delivered to homes is 80 kW($P_3$ = 80 kW) and the houses have to receive it at 220 V ($V_3$ = 220 V). The substation is a 4000 V to 220 V step-down transformer and $R_2=15\ \...
sam's user avatar
  • 15
2 votes
2 answers
671 views

Ohm's law and Joules heating

Ohm's law state that the ratio of V and I gives us a constant value of R provided that the temperature is kept constant throughout. However, in accordance with the joule's heating it would get heated ...
Abdullah's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
368 views

When to use Ohm's law as opposed to using power formula?

I am a mechanic trying to gain a better understanding of electrical theory on vehicles. I have a sound understanding of Ohm's law and also the power formula (Power = Voltage x Current) However, I am ...
TMax's user avatar
  • 15
8 votes
4 answers
2k views

What's the point of an RMS value? [duplicate]

the RMS (root mean square) value of $f(x)$ is defined as: $$f(x)_{rms}=\sqrt{\frac{\int^b_a (f(x))^2dx}{b-a}}$$ Why do we do this very specific thing of taking the square, the mean, and then the ...
Natrium's user avatar
  • 267
1 vote
3 answers
685 views

What is meant by transmission voltage?

I had a question in class that went : $120$kW of power is generated at a power plant and is then transmitted. The resistance in the transmission lines is $0.4 \Omega$. Calculate the power lost as ...
keeram's user avatar
  • 11
2 votes
1 answer
606 views

Power loss in power cable contradiction

To minimize the power loss in long-distance power cables it is best to minimize the current and maximize the voltage. This is because the power loss in the cable is calculated by $P=VI$, which we can ...
user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
220 views

How same power is distributed in different voltages in power lines?

I have seen when a resistor is connected to a battery, it carries the same voltage across the resistor, if the resistance is changed the current changes but voltage remains the same making the battery ...
sachin's user avatar
  • 356
13 votes
5 answers
4k views

Watts vs. volts amperes

What I understand: In simple DC circuits, this is a product of the current and voltage, such that 1 watt = 1 ampere x 1 volt I understand that a watt is a unit of power (change in energy per unit ...
Alexander's user avatar
  • 329
0 votes
2 answers
86 views

Electrical vs Heating Insulation

Let's say we have a 120V cable and a 600V cable, this means that the 600V needs more electrical insulation to prevent the insulator from exceeding its dielectric strength. But in the other case, the ...
user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
3k views

Why High Voltage Power Lines need more Insulation than a low one?

"A 400 kV cable requires less insulation than a 240V cable." This was regarded as False in one of my question papers, but why? Doesn't a higher voltage means, lower current(P=V. I) and a lower ...
user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
318 views

Is 220 V, 50 A equally dangerous for a person as 1A, 11000 V? [duplicate]

The question is self-explanatory. I'm a high school student so feel free to use scientific terms.
Muhammad Hashim's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
550 views

Electric power and resistance dependance

According to the equations, $$P=VI =I^2R\,\text{ and voltage } V=IR$$ it seems clear that when the resistance is lower by fixing the voltage at constant, the current is therefore, higher, generating ...
Yenhan's user avatar
  • 13
0 votes
0 answers
49 views

Transformer vs Inductor for lighting a bulb or any other appliance

There was a question in my school physics exam which is as follows: Consider a 100W bulb which operates at 50V dc. John wants to light this bulb by a 200V ac source. What component should he use, ...
Pranshu Malik's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
84 views

Won't the Power be dissipated in the first quadrant of this graph?

In the following picture: In the first quadrant of the V-I graph(for an Independent Current Source, where the voltage supplied is positive on the top) won't the power be dissipated instead of being ...
Tejit Pabari's user avatar
11 votes
1 answer
2k views

High voltage power lines - clarification of energy loss

I've been having a bit of trouble understanding the high-voltage power lines. If I was sending power from $A \rightarrow B$, we have: Ohm's law $V = IR$ Power lost in the form of heat $P = I^2 R$ ...
Tweej's user avatar
  • 914
1 vote
2 answers
4k views

Which expression to use for electrical power?

We know that electric power can be written as $P=VI$, or $P=\frac{V^2}{R}$, or $P=I^2R$. But when to use which one? Sometimes two different formulas give different results! Please explain with some ...
user avatar
84 votes
6 answers
24k views

Why does public mains power use 50-60 Hz and 100-240 V?

Is there a physical reason behind the frequency and voltage in the mains electricity? I do not want to know why exactly a certain value was chosen; I am rather interested to know why that range/order ...
SuperCiocia's user avatar
  • 25.3k
0 votes
2 answers
1k views

Does a switched on power socket consume electricity? [closed]

Lets say I have a TV and a power socket but the TV switch is off however the socket switch is switched on, so will it consume electricity?
Bhavesh's user avatar
  • 1,923
5 votes
6 answers
16k views

How power lines use high voltages with a low current?

I've read that power lines use high voltages and low currents to reduce power loss due to resistance. Looking at the formula for power - P = VI So to increase P, you increase V rather than I for ...
user avatar
4 votes
4 answers
14k views

What does it mean when we say that power of a bulb is 10 W? Since $V/I=$ resistance is a constant, how can power $=VI$ be a constant?

My question is simple. In Ideal situation, at constant temperature, we know that normal appliances like a filament bulb has straight Voltage vs Current graph, meaning its resistance is constant or ...
Prem's user avatar
  • 2,366
11 votes
3 answers
5k views

Why high voltage transmission lines?

This is a question which I seem to have tackled multiple times, solved each time after reading a dodgy internet explanation, then partially forgotten about and retackled half a year later. It is time ...
QCD_IS_GOOD's user avatar
  • 7,030
0 votes
2 answers
2k views

What's the relation between output voltage and time to boil water given the same kettle?

An electric kettle rated 220V, 2000W needed 10 minutes to boil water when it is half filled with water in Singapore where the output voltage is 220V. Estimate the amount of time needed to do the same ...
Happytreat's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
502 views

Electric Power $P$

In my textbook there are 2 formulas for electric power: $$\begin{array}{cccr} P &=& E/t &\hspace{10pt} (1) \\ P &=& VI. &\hspace{10pt} (2) \end{array}$$ What is the ...
user3034084's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
50 views

Computing power based on weighted averages [closed]

I'm struggling to understand the reason why I'm getting different results with two apparently similar ways to compute the power consumption (over multiple time intervals) of an electrical circuit. ...
betabandido's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
4k views

Electric power for current density

The electric power produced by a current $I\in\mathbb{R}^+$ and a voltage $V\in\mathbb{R}^+$ is $$ P = IV. $$ Now the current is given as an (alternating) current density $J(\mathbf{x},t)=\Im(e^{i\...
Nico Schlömer's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
39k views

Confusion about P=VI and V=IR

If we look at $P=VI$, we see that if the current doubles then the potential difference is halved but this doesn't seem to make sense according to $V=IR$. If we look at that equation, since the ...
Aj876's user avatar
  • 23
1 vote
2 answers
685 views

Calculate power $P=V \times I$

I have an adapter which mentions like this... Input: 100-240V~1.8A 50-60hZ So how much power does it really consume? I just knew ...
Vivek's user avatar
  • 111
1 vote
5 answers
1k views

How do electrical devices suck electricity?

If the electric potential is 220V and some device needs 1500watts then how does it suck exactly that amount of electrical energy from outlet?
Ron's user avatar
  • 221
0 votes
4 answers
3k views

How can AC source with different voltage provide same power?

As some of us maybe aware, USA mains connection is 110 V while those in Asian countries are 220 V. How is it still possible for the Adapter to provide the necessary power to the device, say a laptop, ...
Shamim Hafiz - MSFT's user avatar