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mariarad [96]
4 years ago
3

Imagine that you're performing measurements on a circuit with a multimeter. You measure a total circuit current of 2A, and the c

ircuit is powered by a 24 V power supply. What total resistance value would you expect to measure in the circuit?
A. 48 ohms
B. 2 ohms
C. 12 ohms
D. 24 ohms

A circuit contains a 10 ohm resistor, a 50 ohm resistor, and an 80 ohm resistor connected in parallel. If you test this circuit with a DMM, you should read a total resistance value of

A. 75 ohms.
B. 7.55 ohms.
C. 140 ohms.
D. 0.13 ohms.

Vero puts the probe of her DMM across two terminals to check the voltage. She notices the needle actually goes below zero. What's happening?

A. Since there can't be a negative quantity of voltage, there must be zero volts present.
B. She's reading resistance by mistake.
C. Her meter needs the battery to be replaced.
D. She has reversed the polarity.


What type of circuit measurement is made by placing a meter's leads in parallel with a de-energized circuit?

A. Current
B. Power
C. Voltage
D. Resistance

The allowable amount of resistance between a resistor's true resistance and its labeled resistance is called the

A. potential.
B. continuity.
C. tolerance.
D. specification.

George is replacing a burned-out resistor in a circuit board. The board has a 10, a 20 and a 40 ohm resistor, all in series. When George has soldered in the new component and the circuit is fixed, he checks his mulitimeter. What reading does he get?

A. 5.71 ohms
B. 110 ohms
C. 47 ohms
D. 70 ohms

If you touch the two probes together while the DMM is set to resistance, what will happen?

A. The meter will short circuit and trip a protective circuit.
B. The meter will read infinite ohms (as high as its scale goes).
C. The meter will show the equivalent voltage of the meter's internal battery.
D. The meter will read 0 ohms

A circuit contains a 12 V power supply (a DC battery) and two 100 ohm resistors connected in series. What total current value would you expect to measure in this circuit?

A. 16.67 A
B. 0.12 A
C. 0.06 A
D. 8.33 A

A circuit with 1000 ohms resistance has current of 2 amps. What's the level of power?

A. 4000 watts
B. 2000 watts
C. 800 watts
D. 1000 watt

Uwe is doing a measurement using the clamp-on ammeter method. What sort of a device is he most likely working on?

A. High-current power transformer
B. Radio circuit
C. Lighting circuit
D. Power supply

What's resistance equal to?

A. I / V
B. W / I 2
C. V × I
D. W / V

Jen is trying to discover if a motor has failed windings. What sort of test can she do?

A. Short circuit test
B. Voltage test
C. Continuity test
D. AC current test

A high-voltage probe should always be used whenever you measure voltages near or above

A. 500 VAC or VDC.
B. 100 VAC or VDC.
C. 1000 VAC or VDC.
D. 750 VAC or VDC.

One watt of electrical power is produced when

A. electrical pressure is present in a circuit.
B. a conducting path is present between two opposing electrical charges.
C. one ampere of electrical current flows due to an applied voltage of one volt.
D. work is done to move electrons with respect to time.


Xien is checking the power input terminals on a commercial installation. The voltage should be 480 V. However, the multimeter she brought only reads up to 200 V. What should she do?

A. Get a different DMM, because the high voltage might damage the one she brought.
B. Set it to R x 10 and do the reading there.
C. She needs a high-voltage probe for this high a measurement.
D. Step the voltage down and read the stepped-down voltage, multiplying it by the step factor.


Trey is testing a properly-working resistor in a circuit and finds its value to be far lower than he expects. What's going on?

A. He didn't cut a lead on the resistor.
B. The resistor is installed backwards.
C. The circuit is energized.
D. The resistor is faulty
Physics
1 answer:
lesya [120]4 years ago
7 0

You really like to squeeze all you can out of your points, don't you !

This question should really be reported for being too complex.  But I'm such a nerd for electrical stuff, I'm gonna answer it anyway.

12 ohms (C)

7.55 ohms (B)

Vero has the probes of her DMM swapped. (D)

Resistance (D)

Tolerance (C)

70 ohms (D)

The meter will read zero ohms.  (D)

0.06 A (60 mA) (C)

4,000 watts (A)

High-current power transformer (A)

W / I² (B)

Continuity test (C).  She should do the short circuit test too (A).  If the motor winding failed because it melted into a blob of copper during a few seconds of extreme over-current, it would pass a Continuity test just fine and Jen would not know that it had failed.

Personally, I use a high-voltage probe when I'm measuring ANY voltage.  I've been zapped.  No, I mean I've been zapped GOOD !  I'm an Electrical Engineer, so I know enough to be afraid of the stuff.

1A of current flows due to an applied voltage of 1V.  (C)

Step the voltage down and read the stepped-down voltage, multiplying it by the step factor. (D)  

The circuit is most likely energized ... the wrong way to measure a resistor in a circuit, and you can easily damage your meter by doing that. (C)  

It's also possible that the resistor might have taken an extreme zap and permanently changed its value. (That could be one reason why you're measuring it.) (D)

If I don't get a 'Brainliest' for this one, then there's no justice in the world.

As a little extra side-problem in Math, I just wanna mention that my efforts have been rewarded with a generous bounty of 0.3125 Brainly point per answer.  Shame on me !  

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3 years ago
consider a charge of -15.0 mCmoving to the right a 2.00x10^6 m/s in a mganetic field of .0300 T pointing upwards. What is the ma
77julia77 [94]

Answer:

a = 1.13×10^-8 m/s²

Explanation:

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5 0
3 years ago
a person brings his face close to a mirror . h e finds that the image of his face is magnified write the name of the mirror used
DIA [1.3K]

Answer:

Spherical concave mirrors

Explanation:

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Concave mirrors, on the other hand, can have real images. If the object is further away from the mirror than the focal point, the image will be upside-down and real---meaning that the image appears on the same side of the mirror as the object.

The closer the object comes to the focal point (without passing it), the bigger the image will be.

You can try this yourself by looking into the concave side of a shiny spoon. If you look into the spoon while holding it at arm’s length, you’ll see an extremely magnified, upside-down image of your face. But as you bring the spoon closer to your eyes, the image will get bigger and bigger.

<em>- Hope this helps! <3</em>

5 0
3 years ago
Explain how the extension of a spring is determined
fgiga [73]

Answer:

For a given spring the extension is directly proportional to the force applied For example if the force is doubled, the extension doubles When an elastic object is stretched beyond its limit of proportionality the object does not return to its original length when the force is removed

Explanation:

6 0
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Svetradugi [14.3K]
I’m not sure if its correct but I think it’s focal Ray point


For concave mirrors, some generalizations can be made to simplify ray construction. They are: An incident ray traveling parallel to the principal axis will reflect and pass through the focal point. An incident ray traveling through the focal point will reflect and travel parallel to the principal axis.
8 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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