Q.10 An electric circuit with a resistor of constant resistance ‘R’ is maintained at a constant voltage ‘V’. Based on Ohm’s law, if the current ‘I’ through the circuit is doubled, the power ‘P’ dissipated across the resistor is (A) P/2 (B) P (C) 2P (D) 4P

Q.10

An electric circuit with a resistor of constant resistance ‘R’ is maintained at a constant

voltage ‘V’. Based on Ohm’s law, if the current ‘I’ through the circuit is doubled, the

power ‘P’ dissipated across the resistor is

(A) P/2

(B) P

(C) 2P

(D) 4P

Ohm’s Law Power Dissipation: Doubled Current Effect on Resistor Power

Ohm’s law relates voltage, current, and resistance in electric circuits, directly impacting power dissipation. When current doubles in a constant voltage setup with fixed resistance, power quadruples due to the P = I²R formula.

Correct Answer

The power dissipated across the resistor becomes 4P. This follows from the power equation P = I²R, where doubling current to 2I yields P’ = (2I)²R = 4I²R = 4P.

Original Setup

  • Initial current I = V/R from Ohm’s law V = IR.
  • Original power P = VI = I²R = V²/R.

Effect of Doubling Current

New current 2I gives new power P’ = (2I) × V, but since voltage stays constant, use P’ = (2I)²R = 4P. The quadratic dependence on current causes this fourfold increase.

Option Explanations

Option Explanation
(A) P/2 Incorrect; halving power would occur if current halved, as P ∝ I².
(B) P Incorrect; unchanged power implies constant current, not doubled.
(C) 2P Incorrect; doubling would happen if power depended linearly on current (P = VI), but ignores I²R relation.
(D) 4P Correct, as derived from P = I²R.

Power Formula Summary

Formula Original Power Doubled Current Power
P = I²R I²R = P (2I)²R = 4P
P = V²/R Constant (fixed V, R) N/A (I doubling implies scenario adjustment)

 

1 Comment
  • Vanshika Sharma
    December 25, 2025

    4 times

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