Young's modulus - calculating delta L

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To calculate the stretch (Delta L) of a steel guitar string under tension, the formula used is Delta L = F/k, where k is derived from Young's modulus (Y = kL/A). For a steel string with an initial length of 1 meter, cross-sectional area of 0.500 square millimeters, and Young's modulus of 2.0 x 10^11 pascals, the correct calculation for k is 1 x 10^8 N/m. The tension applied is 1500 Newtons, leading to a calculated stretch of 1.5 x 10^-5 meters, or 0.015 mm. A unit conversion error was identified, indicating the area should be expressed in square meters as 0.0000005 m², which would significantly alter the final result.
Linus Pauling
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1. Consider a steel guitar string of initial length L=1.00 meter and cross-sectional area A=0.500 square millimeters. The Young's modulus of the steel is Y=2.0 \times 10^{11} pascals. How far ( Delta L) would such a string stretch under a tension of 1500 Newtons?
Use two significant figures in your answer. Express your answer in millimeters.




2. Y = kL/A
k = YA/L




3. k = YA/L = (2*10^11 N/m^2)*(.0005m^2) / 1m = 1*10^8 N/m

deltaL = F/k = 1500N/(1*10^8 N/m) = 1.5*10^-5m = .015 mm

I made a mistake with units somewhere but I can't spot it.
 
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Remember that when converting from square millimeters to square meters, you have to square the factor that you are changing by.

Since 1mm = 0.001m, 1mm2 = 0.001m * 0.001m = 0.000001m2

Your problem is that you are dividing by 0.0005m2 instead of 0.0000005m2, so your answer is exactly three orders of magnitude too small.
 
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