Creating a Variable Resistor Using a Bare Resistance Wire and Sliding Contact

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To create a variable resistor using a length of bare resistance wire, a fixed contact, and a sliding contact, the sliding contact must be positioned along the wire. As the sliding contact moves, it makes contact with different points along the wire, effectively changing the length of wire included in the circuit. This variation in length alters the resistance, allowing it to smoothly transition from zero (when the sliding contact is at one end) to a maximum (when it is at the other end) and back to zero. The design ensures that the wire remains uncut, adhering to the constraints of the problem.
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You have a length of bare resistance wire a fixed contact and a sliding contact.Using these things only how can you make a variable resistor such that when the sliding contact is moved along the wire the resistance varies smoothly from zero to a maximum and then to zero?You are not allowed to cut the wire.
 
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Form the wire (of length L and resistance R) into a closed loop. If the sliding contact is at a distance d from the fixed contact, the resistance will be the equivalent parallel resistance from segments of length d and L-d, which should be:

R_eff = [R(d/L)*R((L-d)/L)]/[R(d/L)+R((L-d)/L)] = Rd(L-d)/(L^2),

and as d increases from 0, d(L-d) increases smoothly from 0 till d=L/2 (where R_eff is at its maximal value of R/4) and decreases smoothly to 0 after that (this part maps onto the common puzzle of maximizing the area of a rectangle of given perimeter, but if you don't like that, then the first derivative is L-2d, and the second is -2).
 
Well done Gokul 43201.
 
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