Applying Kirchhoff's rule of single-valued potential
around this loop, we have
One motive for using the complex exponential form is that
it is so easy to take derivatives: each time derivative
of just "pulls down" another factor of .
Thus
Now, the charge on a capacitor cannot be measured directly;
what we usually want to know is the current
. Since the entire time dependence of
is in the factor
, we have trivially
Since everything we might want to know
(, and )
has the same time dependence
except for differences of phase
encoded in the complex amplitudes and ,
we can think in terms of
an effective resistance
such that
The current through the circuit
cannot be different in different places
(due to charge conservation)
and follows the time dependence of the driving voltage
but (because is generally complex)
is not generally in phase with it,
nor with the voltage drop across :
From Eqs. (9) and (11) one can easily deduce the phase differences between these voltages at any time (for example, ) when has its maximum negative real value: the voltage drop across will be real and positive (it is always exactly out of phase with the driving voltage) but the voltage drop across the capacitor will be in the negative imaginary direction - i.e. its real part will be zero at that instant.
A convenient way of looking at this is with the "Phase Circle" shown in Fig. 21.2, where the "directions" of the voltage drops in "complex phase space" are shown as vectors. Both voltage drops "rotate" in this "phase space" at a constant frequency but their phase relationship is always preserved: namely, the voltage across the capacitor lags that across the resistor by an angle of .21.4At any instant the actual, measurable value of any voltage is just its real part, i.e. the projection of its complex vector onto the real axis.