rezistivity
Rezistivity is an intrinsic electrical property of a material that quantifies how strongly it resists the flow of electric current when an electric field is applied. Denoted by the symbol ρ (rho), it is measured in ohm-meters (Ω·m) and is the reciprocal of electrical conductivity (σ). For isotropic materials, ρ = 1/σ; in anisotropic substances, resistivity is more correctly represented as a tensor ρ_ij, relating current density J to electric field E via J_i = ∑ σ_ij E_j.
In practice, resistivity is determined from a measured resistance R by accounting for geometry: R = ρ L
Temperature strongly affects rezistivity. In metals, ρ typically increases with temperature due to enhanced electron-phonon scattering, described
Applications span electronics, materials science, and geology, including characterizing metallic alloys, conducting films, and determining subsurface