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GCSE Physics Practice Test: Electricity - Resistance in Electrical Circuits
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Avg score: 72% Most missed: “How is the current of a resistor related to the potential difference across it?”
Circuits are electrical systems that provide a path for current to flow. If a circuit is broken, for example by using a switch, current is no longer able to move through it. If there is a short circuit, an electrical system will not work properly. A short circuit is a fault in a system that links two parts of a circuit that should not be linked together. In other words, it is a pathway that takes the electricity in the wrong direction. Electrical circuits can have a wide range of applications; controlling your central heating; playing a door chime when the bell is pressed; inside computers... Show more
GCSE Physics Practice Test: Electricity - Resistance in Electrical Circuits
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10 Questions

1. If a 100 ohm resistor is replaced with a 200 ohm resistor, whilst the potential difference is kept constant, what happens to the current?
2. What is the unit of resistance?
3. An LED emits light when the current flows through it in which direction?
4. What can be found by measuring current and voltage?
5. If two resistors are connected in parallel in a circuit, which has a total electrical potential difference of five volts, what is the value of the electrical potential difference across each resistor?
6. If three 1.5V cells are connected in series, what is the total potential difference provided by the cells?
7. How is the current of a resistor related to the potential difference across it?
8. If two five ohm resistors are connected in series, what is the total resistance of the circuit?
9. Which equation correctly relates voltage, resistance and current?
10. The current through a component depends on which of the following?