Physics, asked by devtalreja5, 10 months ago

A copper wire has a diameter of 0.5 mm and resistivity of 16 x 10'8 m. What will be the length of this wire to make its resistance 10? How much does the resistance change if the diameter is doubled?​

Answers

Answered by Deepak0608
2

Answer:

Area of cross-section of the wire, A =π (d/2) 2

Diameter= 0.5 mm = 0.0005 m

Resistance, R = 10 Ω

We know that

∴ length of the wire = 122.72m

If the diameter of the wire is doubled, new diameter=2×0.5=1mm=0.001m

Let new resistance be Rʹ

∴ the new resistance is 2.5 Ω

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