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Chapter 2 Current. 2 Objectives –After completing this chapter, the student should be able to: State the two laws of electrostatic charges. Define coulomb.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 2 Current. 2 Objectives –After completing this chapter, the student should be able to: State the two laws of electrostatic charges. Define coulomb."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2 Current

2 2 Objectives –After completing this chapter, the student should be able to: State the two laws of electrostatic charges. Define coulomb. Identify the the unit used to measure current flow. Define the relationship of amperes, coulombs, and time through a formula.

3 3 Describe how current flows in a circuit Describe how electrons travel in a conductor. Define and use scientific notation. Identify commonly used prefixes for powers of ten.

4 4 First law of electrostatic charges –Like charges repel each other. Second law of electrostatic charges –Unlike charges attract each other. Coulomb (C) –Unit adopted for measuring charges. –6,240,000,000,000,000,000 electrons or –6.24 x 10 18.

5 5

6 6 Current –The drift of electrons from an area of negative charge to an area of positive charge. Ampere (A) –The amount of current in a conductor when one coulomb of charge moves past a point in one second.

7 7 The relationship between amperes and coulombs per second can be expressed as: –I = current measured in amperes. –Q = quantity of electrical charge in coulombs. –t = time in seconds.

8 8 Hole –The movement of an electron from one atom to the next, creating the appearance of a positive charge moving in the opposite direction.

9 9

10 10

11 11 Voltage source –Supplies electrons from one end of the conductor. –Removes electrons from the other end of the conductor. –Can be thought of as a kind of pump.

12 12 Scientific notation –means of using single-digit numbers plus powers of 10 to express large and small numbers. 3000 = 3 x 10 3.000003 = 3 x 10 -6

13 13

14 14 Milliampere (mA) –Used more frequently than ampere. –Equal to 1/1000 of an ampere or.001 A. Microampere (  A) –Used more frequently than ampere. –Equal to 1/1,000,000 of an ampere or 0.000001 A.

15 15 In Summary –Laws of electrostatic charges –Coulomb –Electric current –Ampere –Relationship between current, electrical charge, and time formula –Hole movement

16 16 Scientific notation –Negative exponent –Positive exponent –Milli prefix –Micro prefix


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