Voltage of a lemon cell
=======================
A lemon cell is formed by inserting Copper and Zinc plates in to a lemon, or any dilute acid.
The voltage developed across the electrodes is very small and the cell has a very high internal 
resistance. Due to this the voltage drops when a load resistor is conencted.
 
**Objective**

Make a lemoc cell and explore it's internal resistance.

.. image:: schematics/lemon-cell.svg
	   :width: 300px

**Procedure**

-  Connect th electrodes to A1 and Ground
-  Enable Checkbutton for displaying the voltage at A1
-  Connect a :math:`1000\Omega` resistance across the electrodes.
-  Measure the voltage again, to note down the reduction in it.

**Discussion**

Voltage across the Copper and Zinc terminals is nearly .9 volts.
Connecting the resistor reduces it to 0.33 volts. When connected,
current will start flowing through the resistor. But why is the voltage
going down ?

What is the internal resistance of the cell ?

Current is the flow of charges and it has to complete the path. That
means, current has to flow through the cell also. Depending on the
internal resistance of the cell, part of the voltage gets dropped inside
the cell itself. Does the same happen with a new dry-cell ?
