The resistance of a uniform copper wire 50.0 meters long and 1.15mm in diameter is 0.830 ohms at 20°C. What is the resistivity if the copper at this temperature?
The resistance of the copper wire is:
"R=\\rho\\frac{l}{S}=\\rho\\frac{4l}{\\pi d^2},"
where "\\rho" - the resistivity of the copper;
l - the lenght of the wire;
S - the cross-sectional area of the wire;
d - the diameter of the wire.
So, resistivity is:
"\\rho=\\frac{\\pi d^2R}{4l}=\\frac{3.14\\cdot 0.00115^2\\cdot 0.83}{4\\cdot 50}=1.72\\cdot 10^{-8}\\space Ohm\\cdot m."
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