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I'm trying to get a conceptual understanding of why resistors in series share the same current but have different voltage drops, and why resistors in parallel share the same voltage, yet have different currents.
I understand that the current before and after a junction must be equal. So it makes sense to me why the resistors in series have the same current flow through them; there is no junction. It also makes sense why parallel resistors have different current, because there is at least 1 junction where the current must "split". In other words, I1+I2=Itotal. Good.
What I don't understand is why voltage does not follow the same rule. Why can voltage before the junction be the same at all parts of the junction?
I understand that the current before and after a junction must be equal. So it makes sense to me why the resistors in series have the same current flow through them; there is no junction. It also makes sense why parallel resistors have different current, because there is at least 1 junction where the current must "split". In other words, I1+I2=Itotal. Good.
What I don't understand is why voltage does not follow the same rule. Why can voltage before the junction be the same at all parts of the junction?