Voltage divider with short circuit part 2

currentshort-circuitvoltage divider

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

This question is a slightly modified follow-up to my previous question Voltage divider with a short, what is Vout?

In this voltage divider I was originally wondering what \$V_{out}\$ was when a short was created across points A & B.

With the short, the voltage at A is given by:

$$V_{A} = \frac{R4}{R1 + R4} \times V_{in} = \frac{200\Omega}{200\Omega+200\Omega} \times 5V = 2.5V$$

The CircuitLab simulator shows the voltage at \$V_{out}\$ as 2.5V, and I actually built this on a breadboard to test it out and indeed the voltage at \$V_{out}\$ is 2.5V.

What I don't understand, is why the voltage at \$V_{out}\$ is 2.5V, since it seems like all the current from A to B should be flowing over the short, i.e. the path of least resistance. My intuitive expectation is that \$V_{out}\$ should read 0, or at least have a floating value, but this isn't the case.

Perhaps this is rightly a Physics question, I don't know. But why is there a voltage on \$V_{out}\$?

Best Answer

The voltage at A, B, and Vout are all 2.5 volts. Since the voltage at A and B is the same, there is no current through R2 and R3. The voltage at your output is the voltage at A minus the voltage drop across R2, which is R2 times the current through R2, which is zero. 2.5 minus zero is 2.5