What Causes Resistance?
Resistance
Resistance is a measure of "how hard" it is to "push" electricity through a circuit element. Resistance can also apply to an entire circuit.
What causes resistance?
Examples of resistors
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Definition: Resistance
Resistance slows down the flow of charge in a circuit. The unit of resistance is the ohm (Ω) which is defined as a volt per ampere of current.
Quantity: Resistance R Unit: ohm Unit symbol: ω
Did You Know?
Fluorescent lightbulbs do not use thin wires; they use the fact that certain gases glow when a current flows through them. They are much more efficient (much less resistance) than lightbulbs.
Light bulb filament
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All conductors have some resistance. For example, a piece of wire has less resistance than a light bulb, but both have resistance.
A lightbulb is a very thin wire surrounded by a glass housing The high resistance of the small wire (filament) in a lightbulb causes the electrons to transfer a lot of their kinetic energy in the form of heat. The heat energy is enough to cause the filament to glow white-hot which produces light.
The wires connecting the lamp to the cell or battery hardly even get warm while conducting the same amount of current. This is because of their much lower resistance due to their larger cross-section (they are thicker).
An important effect of a resistor is that it converts electrical energy into other forms of heat energy. Light energy is a by-product of the heat that is produced.
Did You Know?
There is a special type of conductor, called a superconductor that has no resistance, but the materials that make up all known superconductors only start superconducting at very low temperatures. The “highest” temperature superconductor is mercury barium calcium copper oxide \((\text{HgBa}_{2}\text{Ca}_{2}\text{Cu}_{3}\text{O}_{\text{x}})\) which is superconducting for temperatures of \(-\text{140}\) \(\text{℃}\) and colder.
This lesson is part of:
Electric Circuits