[Physics] Filament lamp: Negative part of I/V characteristic

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I don't understand the negative part of the graph. It shows that the resistance is decreasing as the voltage goes from negative towards 0.

What does a negative voltage mean and why does the graph have the shape that it does in that region?

Thanks

Best Answer

A negative voltage means that you have hooked your power supply across your device backwards. Purely resistive devices, like resistors and lamp filaments, don't care which way current flows through them, only how much current flows. Such devices will always have current-voltage curves which are "odd" functions, with $I(-V) = -I(V)$, as in your graph. It is safe for you to cover up all but the upper-right quadrant of your graph.

The current-voltage characteristic is curved for large $|V|$ because your filament has a larger resistance when hot (that is, when the power $P=IV$ is large).