Fundamentals of Physics Extended
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781118230725
Author: David Halliday, Robert Resnick, Jearl Walker
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
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Chapter 26, Problem 2P
An isolated
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An isolated conducting sphere has a 10 cm radius. One wire carries a current of 1.000 002 0 A into it. Another wire carries a current of 1.000 000 0 A out of it. How long would it take for the sphere to increase in potential by 1000 V?
An isolated conducting sphere has a 11 cm radius. One wire carries a current of 1.0000023 A into it while another wire carries a current of 1.0000000 A out of it. How long in seconds would it take for the sphere to increase in potential by 1000 V?
Suppose you have a rod of pure silicon with a diameter of 2.79cm and a length of 20.6cm. These rods are often used in experiments, such as the Large Hadron Collider in France/Switzerland to detect high-energy particles, and they have a very high resistivity of 2300Ω⋅m.
What current, in amperes, flows through the rod when a potential difference of 1.23* 10^3 V is applied between its ends ?
Chapter 26 Solutions
Fundamentals of Physics Extended
Ch. 26 - Figure 26-15 shows cross sections through three...Ch. 26 - Figure 26-16 shows cross sections through three...Ch. 26 - Figure 26-17 shows a rectangular solid conductor...Ch. 26 - Figure 26-18 shows plots of the current i through...Ch. 26 - Figure 26-19 shows four situations in which...Ch. 26 - In Fig. 26-20, a wire that carries a current...Ch. 26 - Figure 26-21 gives the electric potential Vx...Ch. 26 - The following table give the lengths of three...Ch. 26 - Prob. 9QCh. 26 - Three wires, of the same diameter, are connected...
Ch. 26 - Figure 26-23 gives, for three wires of radius R,...Ch. 26 - During the 4.0 min a 5.0 A current is set up in a...Ch. 26 - An isolated conducting sphere has a 10 cm radius....Ch. 26 - A charged belt, 50 cm wide, travels at 30 m/s...Ch. 26 - The United States National Electric Code, which...Ch. 26 - SSM WWW A beam contains 2.0 108 doubly charged...Ch. 26 - A certain cylindrical wire carries current. We...Ch. 26 - A fuse in an electric circuit is a wire that is...Ch. 26 - Prob. 8PCh. 26 - The magnitude Jr of the current density in a...Ch. 26 - The magnitude J of the current density in a...Ch. 26 - What is the current in a wire of radius R = 3.40...Ch. 26 - Near Earth, the density of protons in the solar...Ch. 26 - Prob. 13PCh. 26 - A human being can be electrocuted if a current as...Ch. 26 - SSM A coil is formed by winding 250 turns of...Ch. 26 - Copper and aluminium are being considered for a...Ch. 26 - Prob. 17PCh. 26 - A wire 4.00 m long and 6.00 mm in diameter has a...Ch. 26 - SSM What is the resistivity of a wire of 1.0 mm...Ch. 26 - Prob. 20PCh. 26 - ILW A common flashlight bulb is rated at 0.30 A...Ch. 26 - Kiting during a storm. The legend that Benjamin...Ch. 26 - Prob. 23PCh. 26 - GO Figure 26-25a gives the magnitude Ex of the...Ch. 26 - SSM ILW A wire with a resistance of 6.0 is drawn...Ch. 26 - In Fig. 26-26a. a 9.00 V battery is connected to a...Ch. 26 - SSM WWW Two conductors are made of the same...Ch. 26 - GO Figure 26-27 gives the electric potential Vx...Ch. 26 - Prob. 29PCh. 26 - Prob. 30PCh. 26 - Prob. 31PCh. 26 - Prob. 32PCh. 26 - Prob. 33PCh. 26 - GO Figure 26-29 shows wire section 1 of diameter...Ch. 26 - GO In Fig. 26-30, current is set up through a...Ch. 26 - GO Swimming during a storm. Figure 26-31 shows a...Ch. 26 - Prob. 37PCh. 26 - In Fig. 26-32a, a 20 resistor is connected to a...Ch. 26 - A certain brand of hot-dog cooker works by...Ch. 26 - Thermal energy is produced in a resistor at a rate...Ch. 26 - SSM A 1220 V potential difference is applied to a...Ch. 26 - In Fig. 26-33, a battery of potential difference V...Ch. 26 - ILW An unknown resistor is connected between the...Ch. 26 - A student kept his 6.0 V, 7.0 W radio turned on at...Ch. 26 - SSM ILW A 1250 W radiant heater is constructed to...Ch. 26 - A copper wire of cross-sectional area 2.00 106 m2...Ch. 26 - A heating element is made by maintaining a...Ch. 26 - Exploding shoes. The rain-soaked shoes of a person...Ch. 26 - A 100 W lightbulb is plugged into a standard 120 V...Ch. 26 - GO The current through the battery and resistors 1...Ch. 26 - GO SSM WWW Wire C and wire D are made from...Ch. 26 - GO The current-density magnitude in a certain...Ch. 26 - A 120 V potential difference is applied to a space...Ch. 26 - Go Figure 26-36a shows a rod of resistive...Ch. 26 - SSM A Nichrome heater dissipates 500 W when the...Ch. 26 - Prob. 56PCh. 26 - An 18.0 W device has 9.00 V across it. How much...Ch. 26 - An aluminum rod with a square cross section is 1.3...Ch. 26 - A cylindrical metal rod is 1.60 m long and 5.50 mm...Ch. 26 - The chocolate crumb mystery. This story begins...Ch. 26 - SSM A steady beam of alpha particles q = 2e...Ch. 26 - A resistor with a potential difference of 200 V...Ch. 26 - A 2.0 kW heater element from a dryer has a length...Ch. 26 - cylindrical resistor of radius 5.0 mm and length...Ch. 26 - A potential difference V is applied to a wire of...Ch. 26 - The headlights of a moving car require about 10 A...Ch. 26 - A 500 W heating unit is designed to operate with...Ch. 26 - The copper windings of a motor have a resistance...Ch. 26 - How much electrical energy is transferred to...Ch. 26 - A caterpillar of length 4.0 cm crawls in the...Ch. 26 - Prob. 71PCh. 26 - A steel trolley-car rail has a cross-sectional...Ch. 26 - A coil of current-carrying Nichrome wire is...Ch. 26 - Prob. 74PCh. 26 - A certain x-ray tube operates at a current of 7.00...Ch. 26 - A current is established in a gas discharge tube...Ch. 26 - In Fig.26-37, a resistance coil wired to an...Ch. 26 - An insulating belt moves at speed 30 m/s and has a...Ch. 26 - In a hypothetical fusion research lab, high...Ch. 26 - When a metal rod is heated, not only its...Ch. 26 - A beam of 16 MeV deuterons from a cyclotron...Ch. 26 - A linear accelerator produces a pulsed beam of...Ch. 26 - An electric immersion heater normally takes 100...Ch. 26 - A 400 W immersion heater is placed in a pot...Ch. 26 - A 30 F capacitor is connected across a programmed...
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- You have a battery marked "6.00 V." When you draw a current of 0.387 A from it, the potential difference between its terminals is 5.25 V. What is the potential difference AV when you draw 0.583 A? AV =arrow_forwardYou have a battery marked "6.00 V." When you draw a current of 0.387 Afrom it, the potential difference between its terminals is 5.25 V. What is the potential difference Δ? when you draw 0.583 A?arrow_forward28 1 6.0 x 10 m3 1. Consider a cylindrical wire that has conduction electron density and radius 0.5 mm. An electric field with strength 7.5 x 10-4 creates a current of 4.8 x 10 electrons per second. a) What is the average drift speed for an electron? (include units) b) What is the average time in between electron collisions? fs (express your answer in femtoseconds)arrow_forward
- A 200-km-long high-voltage transmission line 2.0 cm in diameter carries a steady current of 1 000 A. If the conductor is copper with a free charge density of 8.5 × 10−8 electrons per cubic meter, how many years does it take one electron to travel the full length of the cable?arrow_forwardA 320-km-long high-voltage transmission line 2.00 cm in diameter carries a steady current of 1,070 A. If the conductor is copper with a free charge density of 8.50 x 1028 electrons per cubic meter, how many years does it take one electron to travel the full length of the cable? (Use 3.156 x 107 for the number of seconds in a year.) yrarrow_forwardThe potential difference across the terminals of a battery is8.40 V when there is a current of 1.50 A in the battery from the negativeto the positive terminal. When the current is 3.50 A in the reverse direction,the potential difference becomes 10.20 V. What is the emf of the battery?arrow_forward
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