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okzoomer
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I am helping a high school student with a physics experiment on internal resistance of a cell. My background is in chemistry, not physics.

Browsing SE for lab design, Measurement of internal resistance of a battery pops up. Now the high school lab cannot generate square waves so I was looking for alternatives.

I understand that in an open circuit, emf is the same as the voltage across the cell. The school does not have a potentiometer. There are videos such as this video at 4:20 that shows an open circuit, with an emf measurement. But wouldn't the cell form a circuit with the multimeter, thereby voiding the set up?But wouldn't the cell form a circuit with the multimeter, thereby voiding the set up because the current is non-zero?

Please kindly point out what I am missing, and provide me with tips on how to avoid shorting the circuit and/or the multimeter. Thank you!

I am helping a high school student with a physics experiment on internal resistance of a cell. My background is in chemistry, not physics.

Browsing SE for lab design, Measurement of internal resistance of a battery pops up. Now the high school lab cannot generate square waves so I was looking for alternatives.

I understand that in an open circuit, emf is the same as the voltage across the cell. The school does not have a potentiometer. There are videos such as this video at 4:20 that shows an open circuit, with an emf measurement. But wouldn't the cell form a circuit with the multimeter, thereby voiding the set up?

Please kindly point out what I am missing, and provide me with tips on how to avoid shorting the circuit and/or the multimeter. Thank you!

I am helping a high school student with a physics experiment on internal resistance of a cell. My background is in chemistry, not physics.

Browsing SE for lab design, Measurement of internal resistance of a battery pops up. Now the high school lab cannot generate square waves so I was looking for alternatives.

I understand that in an open circuit, emf is the same as the voltage across the cell. The school does not have a potentiometer. There are videos such as this video at 4:20 that shows an open circuit, with an emf measurement. But wouldn't the cell form a circuit with the multimeter, thereby voiding the set up because the current is non-zero?

Please kindly point out what I am missing, and provide me with tips on how to avoid shorting the circuit and/or the multimeter. Thank you!

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okzoomer
  • 175
  • 1
  • 7

How do multimeters work?

I am helping a high school student with a physics experiment on internal resistance of a cell. My background is in chemistry, not physics.

Browsing SE for lab design, Measurement of internal resistance of a battery pops up. Now the high school lab cannot generate square waves so I was looking for alternatives.

I understand that in an open circuit, emf is the same as the voltage across the cell. The school does not have a potentiometer. There are videos such as this video at 4:20 that shows an open circuit, with an emf measurement. But wouldn't the cell form a circuit with the multimeter, thereby voiding the set up?

Please kindly point out what I am missing, and provide me with tips on how to avoid shorting the circuit and/or the multimeter. Thank you!