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Q119 (CDS-I/2002) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Electricity and magnetism Answer Verified

The circuit element where the impressed voltage is always in phase with the resulting current is

Result
Your answer: —  Â·  Correct: A
Explanation

In an alternating current (AC) circuit, the phase relationship between voltage and current depends on the nature of the circuit elements. In a purely resistive circuit, such as one containing an ideal resistor, the current is directly proportional to the voltage according to Ohm's Law [t3][t9]. Consequently, the voltage and current are in phase, meaning they reach their maximum and minimum values simultaneously and their phasors are aligned [t7][t8]. In contrast, reactive elements introduce a phase shift: in an ideal inductor (coil), the voltage leads the current by 90 degrees (ELI), while in an ideal capacitor, the current leads the voltage by 90 degrees (ICE) [t1][t6]. An ideal transformer, being inductive in nature, also involves phase shifts or inversions depending on the winding configuration [t3]. Therefore, only the ideal resistor maintains a zero-degree phase difference between the impressed voltage and the resulting current.

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