Concept explainers
Figure 26-15 shows cross sections through three long conductors of the same length and material, with square cross sections of edge lengths as shown. Conductor B fits snugly within conductor A, and conductor C fits snugly within conductor B. Rank the following according to their end-to-end resistances, greatest first: the individual conductors and the combinations of A + B (B inside A), B + C(C inside B), and A + B + C(B inside A inside C).
Figure 26-15 Question 1.
To find:
Ranking of resistances from greatest to lowest.
Answer to Problem 1Q
Solution:
Ranking of resistances from greatest to lowest is
Explanation of Solution
1) Concept:
We use the formula of resistance related to resistivity, length, and area. Here, we have given the material and length as same for the given conductors, so the resistivity and length are same for all. So, the resistance will be proportional to only the area of cross section of the conductor. Using the proportionality relation, we can rank the resistances for given combinations.
2) Formula:
3) Given:
Figure 26-15 is the cross sections of conductors.
4) Calculation:
We can calculate the area of cross section of each conductor as,
Area of conductor C is
Similarly, area of conductor A is
We know the formula,
Here, the given conductors are of same material and length so the resistivity and length are the same for each conductor, so the resistance depends on only the area of cross section of the conductor as,
The resistancesof given combination of conductors are,
For combination of
For
For
From this, we can rank the resistances from greatest to lowest as follows,
Conclusion:
We can rank the combination of conductors of same material and length according to the resistance from their area of cross section.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 26 Solutions
FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICS (LLF)+WILEYPLUS
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
Microbiology with Diseases by Body System (5th Edition)
Anatomy & Physiology (6th Edition)
Campbell Essential Biology with Physiology (5th Edition)
Chemistry: A Molecular Approach (4th Edition)
Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals
- The figure shows cross sections through three long conductors of the same length and material, with square cross sections of edge lengths as shown. Conductor B fits snugly within conductor A, and conductor C fits snugly within conductor B. Rank the resistance of A, B, and C?arrow_forwardThree cylindrical wires are made of the same material. Their lengths and radii arewire 1: length ℓ, radius 2rwire 2: length 2ℓ, radius rwire 3: length 3ℓ/2, radius r/2 Rank the wires according to their resistances, greatest first.arrow_forwardTwo conductors are made of the same material and have the same length. Con- ductor A is a solid wire of diameter 1.0 mm. Conductor B is a hollow tube of outside diameter 2.0 mm and inside diameter 1.0 mm. What is the resistance ratio RA/RB, mea- sured between their ends?arrow_forward
- A rod of semiconducting material of Length L=2 m and cross-sectional area A=4 mm2 lies along the x-axis between x=0 and x=L. The material obeys ohm’s Law, and its resistivity varies along the rod according to ρ = ρ0*( 1 - x2/L2) where ρ0=3 x 10-4 Ω.m. The end of the rod at x=0 is at potential V0=25 V greater than the end at x=L. What is the electric potential, in units of volt, in the rod at x=L/2?arrow_forwardThe figure shows cross sections through three long conductors of the same length andmaterial, with square cross sections of edge lengths as shown. Conductor B fits snugly withinconductor A, and conductor C fits snugly within conductor B. Rank the resistance of A, B, and C?arrow_forwardWires A and B are identical (same length and radius) except that each is made from a different material. The resistivity of wire A is larger than the resistivity of B. One end of wire A is connected to one end of wire B. The two remaining free ends are connected across a battery (so the wires and battery form one continuous loop) and current flows through the two wires. Is the potential difference across the two wires is the same, or is it different? If different, which potential is larger? How about the current through each wire? Are they the same or different, and if different, which current is larger? Please explain your answers.arrow_forward
- A material of resistivity p is formed into a solid, truncated cone of height h and radii r₁ and r2 at either end. Calculate the resistance of the cone between the two flat end faces.arrow_forwardThe density of mobile electrons in copper metal is 8.4 x 1028 m-3. Suppose that i = 9.0 × 1018 electrons/s are drifting through a copper wire. (This is a typical value for a simple circuit.) The diameter of the wire is 1.3 mm. In this case, about how many minutes would it take for a single electron in the electron sea to drift from one end to the other end of a wire 26 cm long? minutes (A puzzle: if the drift speed is so slow, how can a lamp light up as soon as you turn it on? We'll come back to this in the next chapter.)arrow_forwardAn aluminum rod with a square cross section is 2.3 m long and 6.5 mm on edge. (a) What is the resistance between its ends? (b) What must be the diameter of a cylindrical copper rod of length 2.3 m if its resistance is to be the same as that of the aluminum rod? The resistivity of aluminum is 2.75 x 10-8 Q-m and the resistivity of copper is 1.69 x 10-8 Q-m. (a) Number i Units (b) Number Unitsarrow_forward
- The density of mobile electrons in copper metal is 8.4 x 1028 m-3. Suppose that i = 4.7 × 1018 electrons/s are drifting through a copper wire. (This is a typical value for a simple circuit.) The diameter of the wire is 2.0 mm. In this case, about how many minutes would it take for a single electron in the electron sea to drift from one end to the other end of a wire 35 cm long? minutesarrow_forwardTwo conductors are made of the same material and have the same length. Conductor A is a solid wire of diameter 7.3m. Conductor B is a hollow tube of inside diameter 4.5m and outside diameter 13.1m. The ratio of their resistance, Ra/Rg, is Select one: O 0.3521 O 2.8403 O 1.1781 O 0.0159 O Not Givenarrow_forwardTwo conductors are made of the same material and have the same length. Conductor 1 is asolid wire of diameter 2.0 m. Conductor 2 is a hollow tube of outside diameter 3.0 m andinside diameter 2.0 m. The ratio of their resistance, R1/R2, is: CHOICES: 1.5/4.3/2.3.8. Which of the following wires has the least resistance? (Assume that they have the sameresistivity.) Choices: Thin, long, and hot.Thin, short, and hot.Thin, short, and cool.Thick, long, and hot.arrow_forward
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax College