« Back to AP Physics Guide / Unit 11: Electric Circuits
Analyzing complex circuits requires more than just Ohm’s Law. We must use Conservation of Charge and Conservation of Energy to solve for unknown currents and voltages in compound systems.
1. Kirchhoff’s Rules (Topics 11.6 & 11.7)
These two rules are the foundation of all circuit analysis in AP Physics 2.
The Junction Rule (Conservation of Charge)
The total current entering a junction must equal the total current leaving it.
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The Loop Rule (Conservation of Energy)
The sum of the potential differences (voltages) around any closed loop in a circuit must be zero.
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2. Compound DC Circuits (Topic 11.5)
Most circuits on the exam are combinations of series and parallel components. To solve them, “collapse” the circuit into a single equivalent resistance (
).
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3. Resistor-Capacitor (RC) Circuits (Topic 11.8)
In AP Physics 2, you primarily need to understand the steady-state behavior of RC circuits (time
and
).
- At
(Uncharged): The capacitor acts like a wire (short circuit). Resistance is zero. - At
(Fully Charged): The capacitor acts like an open switch. No current flows through that branch.
4. Quick AP Practice
📚 Unit 11 Mastery Challenge
1. Two
resistors are connected in parallel. What is the equivalent resistance?
Check Answer
Using2. A circuit branch contains a resistor and a capacitor. Long after the switch is closed, what is the current in that branch?
