Looking at a cross-section of the tube, if the tube were divided up into a number that approaches
infinity of insulated concentric rings of a thickness that approaches zero:
A tube with an internal diameter of 10mm and an outer diameter of 20mm would have a
DC resistance around the outer surface that approaches three times that of the inner surface.
That would mean that additional increases in thickness would not decrease the overall resistance
much. This is rather subjective, though.
The assumption that there is an infinite number of insulated concentric rings, however, is not
accurate, since the tube is a solid piece of metal. Therefore, the above estimate doesn't account
for eddy currents and skin effect, which among other things, depend on the speed of the magnet
travelling past the metal. This is pretty much where my ability to help falls flat. |