Friday, July 19, 2019
Investigating Resistances of Wires :: Papers
 Investigating Resistance's of Wires            Aim:       To investigate different resistances of wires to see which has the     most resistance and which shows the least resistance. I will be     looking at resistances affected by the length of wire.       Variables I could change:       I had the choice of several variables to change such as length, cross     sectional area, material and temperature the experiment is conducted     at.       Prediction:       I believe that by increasing the wire's length it would increase the     resistance. Therefor by decreasing the length it would also decrease     the resistance. I also believe that the rate of the increasing     resistance will be directly proportional to the length so if the     length were doubled the resistance would also double.       I think the graph will look like this:       Reason:       The property that transforms electrical energy into heat energy, in     opposing electrical current, is resistance. A property of the atoms of     all conductors is that they have free electrons in the outer shell of     their structure. As a result of the structure of all conductive atoms,     the outer electrons are able to move about freely even in a solid.     When there is a potential difference across a conductive material all     of the free electrons arrange themselves in lines moving in the same     direction. This forms an electrical current. Resistance is encountered     when the charged particles that make up the current collide with other     fixed particles in the material. As the resistance of a material     increases so to must the force required to drive the same amount of     current. (Information found on a GCSE Physics website)       Ohm's law:       In1826 Georg Ohm discovered that the current flowing through the wire     is proportional to the potential difference across it (providing the     temperature stays the same.) 'Proportional' means if you double the     potential difference the current is doubled (this information was     found in GCSE Physics for you text book)       Current through the wire       [IMAGE]         Amps         Volts      					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.