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Kirchhoff's laws
plural noun
two laws describing the flow of currents in electric circuits. The first states that the algebraic sum of all the electric currents meeting at any point in a circuit is zero. The second states that in a closed loop of a circuit the algebraic sum of the products of the resistances and the currents flowing through them is equal to the algebraic sum of all the electromotive forces acting in the loop
Word History and Origins
Origin of Kirchhoff's laws1
Example Sentences
The topological measures—so-called "characteristic path lengths" and "connectivity loss" between nodes—came up with dramatically different and less accurate results than a model that calculated blackout size driven by the two rules that most influence actual electric transmissions—Ohm's and Kirchhoff's laws.
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