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Jamie_Pi
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Homework Statement
A wire with conductivity σ carries current I. The current is increasing at the rate dI/dt. Show that there is a displacement current in the wire equal to e0/σ⋅dI/dt
Homework Equations
Id = e0⋅dφ/dt
dφ/dt = dE/dt ⋅ A (This is usually true, I'm not sure if it's useful in this case)
dV/dt=dI/dt⋅R (A changed version of Ohm's law)
R=1/σ
E=V/l
The Attempt at a Solution
I started by saying that dV/dt = dI/dt⋅1/σ, in which case the equation might look like:
Id = e0/(σ⋅l)⋅dI/dt⋅A
This looks like I'm going in the right direction, but I'm not sure how to get rid of l (because I don't know the length of the wire, and presumably it doesn't matter) or A (I think that the area of a wire is supposed to be nominal). Any tips that you have would be super great!