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The length of a certain wire is kept same while its radius is doubled. what is the change in the resistance of this wire?

User Agustibr
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1 Answer

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The resistance of a wire is given by

R= (\rho L)/(A)
where
\rho is the resistivity of the material, L the length of the wire and A its cross-sectional area.

In the problem,
\rho and L remain the same, while A changes because the radius changes. The area is given by:

A=\pi r^2
This means that if we double the radius (2r), the area becomes

A_(new)= \pi (2r)^2 = 4 \pi r^2 =4A
And therefore, the new value of the resistance is

R_(new) = (\rho L)/(4 A)= (1)/(4)R

So, when the radius is doubled, the resistance becomes
(1)/(4) of its original value.
User Zulus
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