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When a voltage difference is applied to a piece of metal wire, a current flows through it. if this metal wire is now replaced with a silver wire having twice the diameter of the original wire, how much current will flow through the silver wire? the lengths of both wires are the same, and the voltage difference remains unchanged. (the resistivity of the original metal is 1.68 × 10-8 ω ∙ m, and the resistivity of silver is 1.59 × 10-8 ω ∙ m.)?

1 Answer

1 vote

The resistance of the cylindrical wire is
R=(\rho l)/(A).

Here
R is the resistance,
l is the length of the wire and
A is the area of cross section. Since the wire is cylindrical
A=(\pi d^2)/(4) .

Comparing two wires,


image

Dividing the above 2 equations,


image

Since
d_2=2d_1

The above ratio is


image

We also have,


image

The current through the Silver wire will be 4.23 times the current through the original wire.

answered
User Sunil Kumar Sahu
by
7.9k points

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