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Current, Ohm’s Law, Etc.
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where R is resistance Resistance does not vary with the applied voltage resistor
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Experimentally it is found that R depends on the material the wire is made of and its dimensions. Does not depend on the shape. In a wire of uniform resistivity and cross sectional area, the electric field is a constant for constant currents.
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+ - V
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Exercise 1 Given the resistivity of copper, about Ohm-m, what length of 0.5 cm diameter wire will yield a resistance of 10 Ohms?
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Current Density Consider current flowing in a homogeneous wire with cross sectional area A.
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The Continuity Equation for Steady State Currents Currents and current densities are constant in time – steady state. The flux of out of any closed surface must be zero.
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Another form of Ohm’s Law
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For steady state situation
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Metal: ρ increases with increasing T Resistivity and temperature
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Semiconductors: ρ decreases with increasing T
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Superconductor Once a current has been established in a superconducting ring, it continues indefinitely without the presence of any driving field. 1911 Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes - Hg 2003
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Water NitrogenOxygen Boils Freezes 100 C (212 F)-196 C (-322 F)-183 C (-297 F) 0 C (32 F) -210 C (-346 F) -223 C (-369 F) Our air is ¾ Nitrogen and ¼ Oxygen
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1908- liquefied helium produced First discovered in mercury by Kamerlingh-Onnes in 1911. Critical temperature 4.21K. Nobel Prize in 1913. Superconductivity
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High-T c Superconductivity Liquid nitrogen temperature 77 K Complex ceramic materials were discovered in 1986. They exhibit superconductivity at much higher temperatures – above LN temperature! Muller and Bednortz, Nobel Prize 1987
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Meissner effect and magnetic levitation
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