Conductivity | Electricity, Resistance & Ohm’s Law | Britannica (original) (raw)

conductivity, term applied to a variety of physical phenomena. In heat, conductivity is the quantity of heat passing per second through a slab of unit cross-sectional area when the temperature gradient between the two faces is unity. Electrical conductivity is the current or the quantity of electricity passing per second through a similar slab when the potential gradient is unity, and it is the reciprocal of the resistivity. In sound the conductivity of the orifice or neck of a resonator is the ratio of the area to the length of the orifice.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.