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11 November, 21:07

A 580-mm long tungsten wire, with a 0.046-mm-diameter circular cross section, is wrapped around in the shape of a coil and used as a filament in an incandescent light bulb. When the light bulb is connected to a battery, a current of 0.526 A is measured through the filament. (Note: tungsten has a resistivity of 4.9 * 10-8 Ω • m.). How many electrons pass through this filament in 5 seconds?

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  1. 11 November, 21:40
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    Answer: 1.64 * 10^19 electrons

    Explanation: In order to the explain this problem we have to consider the following:

    The current = charge/time; so

    as the electrons move in the tungsten wire we have:

    0.526 C/s = N electrons per second * charge of electron=

    N electrons/s = 0.526/1.6*10^-19 = 3.28 * 10^18 electrons/s

    Then, during 5 seconds will pass:

    3.28 * 10^18 electrons/s*5 5s = 1.64 * 10^19 electrons
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