Calculating Resistance of a Copper Pipe Based on Length and Diameter

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the resistance of a copper pipe with an inside diameter of 6.720 cm and an outside diameter of 8.000 cm, the resistance formula R = ρ(L/A) is used, where ρ for copper is 1.7E-8. The area A is calculated using the formula A = π(r2^2 - r1^2), leading to an area of approximately 0.00147 m². The initial calculation for length L resulted in 60.93 m, but there was confusion regarding the area formula. After recalculating using the correct method, the area remains consistent, confirming the need to use the difference of the two circular areas for accurate results.
GravityGirl
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A copper pipe has an inside diameter of 6.720 cm and an outside diameter of 8.000 cm. What length of this copper pipe will have a resistance of 8.05 × 10-3 W?

so i am using the equation R=rho(L/A)

A=pi(d2-d1)^2/4 which is 1.29E-4 m

and for copper rho is 1.7E-8

so 8.05E-3=(1.7E-8)(L/1.29E-4)

then L=60.93 m

but this isn't right.

please help me where i am going wrong.
 
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Where did you get the funny area formula? Don't you want pi*r2^2-pi*r1^2 where r's are the radii?
 
well i was just going to use the diameter...but i recalcualted te area using the radius instead and i came up with the same value
 
But (d2-d1)^2 is not equal to d2^2-d1^2.
 
so what did you get for the area...i still get 1.29E-4 m
 
0.00147 m^2. Throw out that formula and subtract the area of the two circles!
 
ok ok...i will do that
 
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