Answer:
E. two times the original diameter
Explanation:
Resistance of a wire is:
R = ρ L/A
where ρ is the resistivity of the material, L is the length, and A is the cross-sectional area.
For a round wire with diameter d:
R = ρ L / (¼ π d²)
The two wires must have the same resistance, so:
ρ₁ L₁ / (¼ π d₁²) = ρ₂ L₂ / (¼ π d₂²)
The wires are made of the same material, so ρ₁ = ρ₂:
L₁ / (¼ π d₁²) = L₂ / (¼ π d₂²)
The new length is four times the old, so 4 L₁ = L₂:
L₁ / (¼ π d₁²) = 4 L₁ / (¼ π d₂²)
1 / (¼ π d₁²) = 4 / (¼ π d₂²)
Solving:
1 / (d₁²) = 4 / (d₂²)
(d₂²) / (d₁²) = 4
(d₂ / d₁)² = 4
d₂ / d₁ = 2
So the new wire must have a diameter twice as large as the old wire.