Essentially yes.
Cobalt is not a very good conductor as copper or silver; the electrical resistivity is 62,4 nohm.m
The electrical resistivity of uranium is 28.10-8 ohm.meter; uranium is not an electrical insulator.
Substances are classified based on their resistivity as conductors, insulators, or semiconductors. Conductors have low resistivity and easily allow the flow of electric current. Insulators have high resistivity and inhibit the flow of electric current. Semiconductors have resistivity values between conductors and insulators, making them suitable for controlling the flow of current in electronic devices.
Lead has high resistivity of current. So , lead is not conduct current. But lead has low resistivity of heat and it conduct heat..
When an electric charge moves through a conductor, an electric current is generated in the conductor. The flow of electrons creates a flow of current in the conductor, which is the movement of electric charge through the material.
The length of a conductor influences its resistance, not its resistivity. Resistivity is an intrinsic property of the material itself, defined as the material's ability to resist electric current, and is independent of the conductor's dimensions. However, as the length of a conductor increases, its resistance increases proportionally, following the formula ( R = \rho \frac{L}{A} ), where ( R ) is resistance, ( \rho ) is resistivity, ( L ) is length, and ( A ) is cross-sectional area. Thus, longer conductors have higher resistance due to the greater distance that electrons must travel.
The resistance of a conductor is directly proportional to the resistivity of the conductor. since the resistivity of a conductor is decreases with decrease in temperature hence the resistance.
Resistivity is the intrinsic property of a conductor, and it is independent of the size of that conductor. Resistance is an extrinsic property that makes it dependent upon the amount of the material that there is present.
Yes, resistivity does depend on the dimensions of the conductor. The resistivity of a material is an intrinsic property, but the resistance of a conductor is also influenced by its dimensions such as length, cross-sectional area, and shape. These dimensions affect the resistance of the conductor through the formula R = ρ * (L/A) where ρ is resistivity, L is length, and A is the cross-sectional area.
Yes, resistivity is dependent on the material of the conductor, not its dimensions. Resistivity is an intrinsic property of a material that influences its ability to resist the flow of electrical current.
No, a material with high resistivity is a poor conductor. Resistivity is a property that quantifies how much a material resists the flow of electric current. Materials with high resistivity impede the flow of current, making them poor conductors.
The electrical resistivity of plutonium is 150.108 ohm.m; plutonium, as a metal, is a conductor but not good.
The resistivity of lead is 208 n.Ohm.m (at 20 degrees celsius) in comparison, the best conducter, silver, has a resistivity of 15,87 n.Ohm.m widely used conducter, copper, has a resistivity of 16,78 n.Ohm.m , considered to be a good conductor resistivity of iron, considered not to be the a good conductor at all is 97 n.Ohm.m So no, lead is not a good conducter. But keep in mind, it's still a conductor, don't use it as an isolation!
The best electrical conductor known is silver, not copper. Electrical resistivity of silver: 1,59.10-8 ohm.m Electrical resistivity of copper: 1,68.10-8 ohm.m A good electrical conductor has a very low electrical resistivity and a high electrical conductivity (the same principles for the thermal conductivity).
the electrical resistance of a conductor through unit cross-sectional area per length is called "resistivity of material"
The electrical resistivity of promethium is 0,75 microohm.meter.
they are used to reduce the resistivity,owing to the fact that the conductor introduces current into the resistance