woltz
It's resistance to electric current increases.
increases
#1). Thinner wire.Either replace a wire with one composed of thinner material, orstretch the existing wire slightly so that it becomes thinner.#2). Longer wire of the same thickness.
Wire. conductors. Wire made into a coil, an inductor.
If you stretch a wire, it would become longer, and therefore thinner. The cross sectional area will decrease and so the resistance will increase. in the real world, if it's stranded wire, the strands will likely break. Solid wire would not stretch evenly, and in either case insulation will tear, so I wouldn't recommend stretching a wire.
resistance
electrical resistance
A thicker wire has less resistance than a thinner wire.
It's resistance to electric current increases.
The wire with smaller diameter (thinner wire) will have greater resistance. This is because resistance is inversely proportional to the cross-sectional area of the wire. Thinner wires have smaller cross-sectional area, leading to greater resistance.
The_wire_resistance_increases.">The wire resistance increases.No, the resistance of the wire decreases if a thicker (larger gauge) wire is used.
When a conductor is made thinner and longer, its resistivity increases. This is because the thinner diameter and longer length result in more collisions between electrons and atoms, leading to greater opposition to the flow of current, which manifests as increased resistance.
It's resistance to electric current increases.
The resistance of the wire increases as it gets longer and thinner. This is because there is more material for the current to pass through, leading to more collisions between electrons and atoms, which results in increased resistance.
Thicker wire has less resistance than thinner wire due to lower electrical resistance. Thicker wire allows more electrons to flow through it easily, resulting in less opposition to the flow of electric current.
If a filament is replaced by a thicker wire, the resistance of the circuit will decrease. Thicker wires have lower resistance because they offer less resistance to the flow of electric current compared to thinner wires of the same material and length.
With a given material, the resistance is inversely proportional to its area of cross section and so the radius. That means wire becoming thinner the resistance increases not decreases as said in the question.