Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Let there be (LED) light...and math

Suppose that you wanted to lead up to an electronics/robotics/etc. curriculum. A STEAM (Science,Technology,Engineering,Art,Math) curriculum. This kind of thing would fit in there somewhere.
Basics: Picking Resistors for LEDs | Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories
So… you just want to light up an LED. What resistor should you use?
Maybe you know the answer, or maybe everyone already assumes that you should know how to get to the answer. And in any case, it’s a question that tends to generate more questions before you actually can get an answer: What kind of LED are you using? What power supply? Battery? Plug-in? Part of a larger circuit? Series? Parallel?
Playing with LEDs is supposed to be fun, and figuring out the answers to these questions is actually part of the fun. There’s a simple formula that you use for figuring it out, Ohm’s Law. That formula is V = I × R, where V is the voltage, I is the current, and R is the resistance. But how do you know what numbers to plug into that formula to get out the right resistor value?

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