So I had a circuit to analyse and I needed to find the equivalent resistor and then I arrived to a confusion. Are R1 and R3 in parallel? Here is the circuit.
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab
So I had a circuit to analyse and I needed to find the equivalent resistor and then I arrived to a confusion. Are R1 and R3 in parallel? Here is the circuit.
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab
Redrawing schematics is a great way to analyze circuits, but also an exercise in why schematics are drawn in particular ways — to more clearly communicate to other engineers.
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab
The rearrangement above should be a little more clear. If you trace a path from one terminal of the battery to the other, you can hopefully see that there are two paths (the split occurs at the junctions on either side of R1).
Series means one-after-another current flow (like a series of events or a television serial). Parallel means that current flows through two or more components at the same time (proportional to the component values).
Just as when you measure voltage, where the value depends on your reference point, components can be series or parallel depending on what you are comparing them to:
You could say:
I see a few answers already, but none provides the definition of "parallel":
Two two-pins components are in parallel when the voltage across them is the same
Conversely, with "series", you have:
Two two-pins components are in series when the current through them is the same
Bear in mind that "the same" literally means "the same" in this context. If you have two resistors with two different voltage generators connected to them, and the generators provide the same voltage, then the voltage across the resistors will numerically be the same, but it won't be the same voltage.
The definitions above also solve the confusion if you only have two components, as highlighted in the comments to this answer. In that case, the components are both in series and in parallel, since the voltage across them and the current through them is the same.
Being in series and in parallel with something else at the same time is not impossible, a very common example can be a voltage generator and its load.
Yes, because there are two different flows:
R2 and the combination (R1, R3) are in series, but R1 and R3 are in parallel.
R1 and R2 have their ends connected to the same nodes.
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab
Figure 1. Remove R2 and V1 and it becomes very obvious that R1 is in parallel with R3.
Yes, R1 and R3 are in parallel. Both their ends land at the same places. As a mains electrical guy I'm not supposed to presume wires are zero ohms, but if I do, this becomes a fairly simple matter. Conductance = 1/resistance.
R1 (50.5 ohms) has a conductance of 0.01980198 siemens.
R2 (55.83 ohms) has a conductance of 0.01791152 siemens.
In parallel, conductances simply add. So 0.0377135 siemens.
Stated in resistance, R1/3 is 26.52 ohms.
R1/3 and R2 are in series. In series, resistances simply add. 26.52+1.54 = 28.06 ohms.
This shunts a 10V constant-voltage supply, so we can plug 10V into Ohm's Law and done.