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Some sources on the web claim that "electricity follows the path of least resistance" is not true, e.g. this physics SE question. However, in every explanation of "short circuits", the author says that current flows through the short because it's following the path of least resistance. How do I reconcile these two facts?

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    $\begingroup$ Which author says that? You can think of the short as an extremely low resistance, in which case majority of the current will flow through the short. You will get some current through the resistance too, but it will be quite negligible. $\endgroup$
    – udiboy1209
    Commented Aug 16, 2013 at 18:28

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It's more like "Electricity tries to follow the path of least resistance". The sentence is a non-rigorous intuitive tool that helps one quickly make sense of current paths. It's not a physical law.

This comes from the behavior of resistors in parallel --this is where current has a "choice" of which direction to take. The potential difference across a resistor is equal to the current into its resistance ($V=IR$, usually called Ohm's law) in appropriate units.

What happens when you have two resistors in parallel is that the p.d. across them must be the same. Which means that $I_1R_1=I_2R_2$. So, more current flows through the resistor with less resistance and vice versa. Current still flows through the greater resistance.

So most current flows through the path of least resistance. In the case of a short circuit, one of the Rs is (nearly) zero, and thus (almost) all the current flows through it.

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  • $\begingroup$ Many authors write that the potential difference across the ends of a short circuit is zero. I cannot understand how charge flows between two points when the potential difference between them is zero. Can charge flow between two points having 0 potential difference?For short circuits is the resistance taken to be infinitesimally small instead of zero so that the potential difference comes out to be non-zero as opposed to the case when zero is taken in which the potential difference comes out to be zero? $\endgroup$
    – MrAP
    Commented Dec 16, 2016 at 19:25
  • $\begingroup$ @MrAP it becomes zero in steady state. If you short-circuit something with a fixed potential difference (a battery), the potential difference is not zero. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 18, 2016 at 5:04
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The statement electricity flows through the path of least resistance means that electricity flows more into the path with less resistance, because it is proportional to the inverse of resistance, obeying:

enter image description here

$$I_1=I\frac{R_2}{R_1+R_2}$$ $$I_2=I\frac{R_1}{R_1+R_2}$$

From these relations you can find out that in two cases all of the current flows through the 1st resistor:

  • $R_1=0$
  • $R_2\gg R_1$ $($mathematically $R_2\to\infty$ $)$

The important fact is that what matters here is the ratio of the resistances: $$I_1=I\frac{R_2}{R_1+R_2}\to I_1=I\frac{1}{\frac{R_1}{R_2}+1}$$

If you plot $I_1\over I$ from the above relation (w.r.t $\frac{R_1}{R_2}$ ) you can see this better:

enter image description here

This is the meaning of the quoted statement.

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  • $\begingroup$ How did you get the I_1 and I_2 equations? $\endgroup$
    – Zach
    Commented Aug 18, 2013 at 6:53
  • $\begingroup$ @Zach: Stuff from basic electrodynamics. Try applying the resistance adding equation. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 31, 2013 at 9:59

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