
To determine the terminal potential difference of the cell in the given circuit, let's analyze the components and apply the necessary formulas.
Therefore, the terminal potential difference of the cell is 2 V.
The circuit has a 3 V cell connected to resistances of \(1 \, \Omega\), \(4 \, \Omega\), and \(4 \, \Omega\). The total resistance \(R_{\text{total}}\) of the circuit is calculated as:
\[ R_{\text{total}} = R_{\text{internal}} + R_{\text{external}} \]
The external resistance is a parallel combination of \(4 \, \Omega\) and \(4 \, \Omega\):
\[ R_{\text{parallel}} = \frac{1}{4} + \frac{1}{4} = 2 \, \Omega. \]
Thus, the total resistance becomes:
\[ R_{\text{total}} = 1 \, \Omega + 2 \, \Omega = 3 \, \Omega. \]
The current in the circuit is:
\[ i = \frac{\text{EMF}}{R_{\text{total}}} = \frac{3 \, \text{V}}{3 \, \Omega} = 1 \, \text{A}. \]
The terminal potential difference \(V_{\text{terminal}}\) is given by:
\[ V_{\text{terminal}} = \text{EMF} - i R_{\text{internal}} = 3 \, \text{V} - (1 \, \text{A} \cdot 1 \, \Omega) = 2 \, \text{V}. \]
Final Answer: 2 V
A black body is at a temperature of 2880 K. The energy of radiation emitted by this body with wavelength between 499 nm and 500 nm is U1, between 999 nm and 1000 nm is U2 and between 1499 nm and 1500 nm is U3. The Wien's constant, b = 2.88×106 nm-K. Then,




What will be the equilibrium constant of the given reaction carried out in a \(5 \,L\) vessel and having equilibrium amounts of \(A_2\) and \(A\) as \(0.5\) mole and \(2 \times 10^{-6}\) mole respectively?
The reaction : \(A_2 \rightleftharpoons 2A\)