Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
VIR Lab (1.5 days) ep3/04 Name: ______________________ Partners: _______________________________________ Date: __________ Period: ________ The following symbols are used in circuit diagrams for a: RESISTOR (in this lab it looks like a very small brown box), BATTERY (in this lab we will use a power supply instead but the symbol remains the same), AMMETER (for measuring the current ”I”). Ours is calibrated in MilliAmps. VOLTMETER (for measuring the change in electric potential from one point to another). Resistor Ammeter + Battery - A Voltmeter V NOTE: RECORD , just below the resistor symbol above, all the numbers and symbols written on the resistor. You will need them later. Define: Current (I) in amperes or amps or milliamps = # of charges to pass a given point in one second. Define: Voltage (V) in volts = change in electric potential between two points. Remember that the change in electrical potential (voltage drop or rise) does not depend on how you get from one place to another but rather on where those two places are (and on what batteries or power supplies you have). Attach one of the red posts on an ammeter to one end of the resistor. Attach the other end of the resistor to one clip on the Power Supply (PS). Attach the black post on the ammeter to the other clip on the PS. Turn on the power supply and turn up the current a little. If the ammeter reads less than zero, reverse the power supply connections. If it reads beyond the scale, change scales or reduce the PS dial. A VIR Lab 1 e pettus 1. You now have a simple series circuit consisting of an ammeter and a resistor, with a power supply as the voltage source. If the ammeter is not in series with the resistor, but is parallel instead, why would it not read the correct current for the resistor (the charges going through the resistor)? Finish the lab before answering the question here. Without disconnecting the existing circuit: Attach the black post of the voltmeter (blue meter) to one end of the resistor (x) and one of the red posts of the voltmeter to the other side of the resistor (y). If the voltmeter reads less than zero, reverse the voltage clips. If the voltmeter reads greater than the largest number on the scale, either change which red post you are using or change the power supply setting. V x y A 2. You now have a parallel arrangement with the voltmeter and the resistor. Most charges will go through the resistor, as they did before you attached the voltmeter. However a few will now go through the voltmeter instead. They all were originally at point x and came back together at point y. Since the voltmeter only measures charges moving through itself, why does putting the voltmeter in parallel with the resistor give you the correct voltage for the resistor? Finish the lab before answering the question here. VIR Lab 2 e pettus DATA Measure at least five spread-out current-voltage data pairs (I,V) for the resistor by changing the power supply setting and recording the meter readings. Select a power supply setting that gives high scale readings on both voltmeter and ammeter and then go to lower values in roughly equal jumps (don't get picky here) until you are near zero on both meters. Before taking data, make sure your settings can satisfy this requirement. Remember to read the scale that corresponds to the posts you are using on the meters and stay on the same scale throughout. Note that your ammeter measures current in milliamps but you need it in amps. Convert. DATA SET 1: Record in a data table (I,V). HERE Before you plot graphs, do the experiment described on the next page. Plot a graph of V on the vertical axis and I on the horizontal axis. If fairly straight, find the slope. AND write the equation for your line below, complete with units. For credit, follow the standards developed in physics for graphing (that INCLUDES writing the equation on the graph! Always!). Before graphing, collect the next set of data. Examine the information in your equation. Is the slope important? What does it represent? Is the intercept important. What does it represent? VIR Lab 3 e pettus DATA SET 2: Read before you start. Turn off the power supply and replace the resistor with a light bulb in a socket. Before turning on the power supply, turn the power supply voltage all the way down. Then turn on the power and set the voltage so the bulb is only moderately bright. “White” bright is too much, you risk burning out the bulb. NEVER GO HIGHER THAN THIS. Change the red post on the ammeter to the right-most red post. Remember to read the scale that corresponds to that post. Measure at least seven (7) spread-out I,V data pairs for the light bulb. Be sure to get several data points when the bulb is dark, with at least one reading less than 15 milliamps, if possible. You need extra data points at low currents in order to properly see any pattern. Graph the data on the computer. You should be able to see the rough trend of the data. If there are large gaps in the data, particularly in the lower current values, you may need to collect more data. The purpose here is to decide whether the entire graph is one big straight line or whether the slope changes as you get to lower and lower currents. This means you must pick your extra data points strategically. Your graph must support your answer convincingly for me as well as for you. Record data and plot a good graph similar to what you did for data set 1.. DATA SET 2: Record in a data table (I,V) data pairs. HERE 3. Is this graph linear over the entire range of currents and voltages? Yes or No ? VIR Lab 4 e pettus