Vector Multiplication There are two ways (in 2 or 3D) to multiply vectors. Scalar product -> two vectors make a scalar A ●B =N Vector product -> two vectors.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Coulomb law.
Advertisements

Atoms are composed of Electrons – fundamental negatively charged (-) particle of matter (-1.6 x10-19C) 2. Protons – fundamental positively charged (+)
Electric Forces and Fields
Announcements Physics Department Seminar: TITLE: "The fluid dynamics of climatic variations." SPEAKER: Professor Walter A. Robinson, Department of Atmospheric.
Chapter 23 Electric Fields.
Phy 213: General Physics III Chapter 21: Electric Charge Lecture Notes.
Electric Charges and Electric Fields
Electric Forces and Electric Fields. Properties of Electric Charges Two types of charges exist They are called positive and negative Named by Benjamin.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Electric Charge and Electric Field Electric Charge and Electric Field
Chapter 21, Electric Charge, and electric Field. Charles Allison © Electric Charge, q or Q Charge comes in two types 1e = 1.6x Coulombs.
Chapter 18: Electric Forces and Fields
Preview Objectives Properties of Electric Charge Transfer of Electric Charge Chapter 16 Section 1 Electric Charge.
Electric Charge, Force, and Field
Nadiah Alenazi 1 Chapter 23 Electric Fields 23.1 Properties of Electric Charges 23.3 Coulomb ’ s Law 23.4 The Electric Field 23.6 Electric Field Lines.
Chapter 23 Electric Fields Summer 1996, Near the University of Arizona.
Phy 203: General Physics III Ch 18: Electric Forces & Electric Fields Lecture Notes.
Chapter 23 Electric Charge and Electric Fields What is a field? Why have them? What causes fields? Field TypeCaused By gravitymass electriccharge magneticmoving.
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Fields
Biology – Premed Windsor University School of Medicine and Health Sciences J.C. Rowe Course Instructor.
Electrostatics Properties of Electric Charges.
Chapter 23, part I 1. Electrical charge. 2. Coulomb’s Law about force between two point charges. 3. Application of Coulomb’s Law.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley PowerPoint ® Lecture prepared by Richard Wolfson Slide Electric.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 – Electricity & Magnetism (Electrostatics) a. Electric Charge, Electric Field & Gauss’ Law.
Electric Charge and Electric Field 16
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field. Units of Chapter 16 Static Electricity; Electric Charge and Its Conservation Electric Charge in the Atom.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
+ - q b b a b s r  a z r  50 kV Dirty air Clean air.
Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields The Origin of Electricity The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. coulombs.
Chapter 19 Electric Forces and Electric Fields Electric Charges There are two kinds of electric charges Called positive and negative Negative.
Electricity and Magnetism  Electric forces hold atoms and molecules together.  Electricity controls our thinking, feeling, muscles and metabolic processes.
Physics for Bioscience (Part II) Electricity Magnetism Waves Sound Optics by Dr. Chittakorn polyon Department of Physics, Faculty of Science,
Electric Forces and Fields: Coulomb’s Law
My Chapter 16 Lecture Outline.
Electric Charge and Electric Field
ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM Phy 220 Chapter1: ELECTRIC FIELDS.
Electric Force One of the four fundamental forces Responsible for much of our technology Governs chemistry which deals with interactions of the outer electrons.
Electrical Charges and Coulomb’s Law
1 Norah Ali Al-moneef king Saud unversity 23.1 Properties of Electric Charges 23.2 Charging Objects By Induction 23.3 Coulomb’s Law 23.4 The Electric Field.
Physics Electricity and Magnetism. HEAT AND MAGNETISM Static Electric Charge All matter is made of atoms. All atoms contain particles which possess electric.
Electric Field Physics Overview Properties of Electric Charges Charging Objects by Induction Coulomb’s Law The Electric Field Electric Field Lines.
Electricity and Magnetism Topic 5. Charge  In a simplified atomic model, electrons orbit about a central nucleus:  As long as the number of electrons.
Electricity and Magnetism Explore the second of the four fundamental forces in nature –Gravity –Electricity and Magnetism –Weak Nuclear Force –Strong Force.
Electric Charge and Coulomb’s Law
S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance.
Electromagnetism Electromagnetism is one of the fundamental forces in nature, and the the dominant force in a vast range of natural and technological phenomena.
Physics 114 Professor Fred Salsbury Office Hours: MWF 11-11:40am; M 1-2pm 301A Olinhttp://
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electric Fields and Forces
Course Organization. What you need to remember from 303K Vectors Right Hand Rule.
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electricity and Magnetism Underlying a Whole Lot of Phenomena.
Electrostatics and Electric Fields Parts of an atom Parts of an atom Nucleus (protons, neutrons) Electrons Protons are positive (+) Electrons are negative.
Static Electricity, Electric Forces, Electric Fields
Electric Fields Chapter What do you already know about charged particles? Like charges repel. Opposite charges attract. Electric charges exert a.
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field. Units of Chapter 16 Static Electricity; Electric Charge and Its Conservation Electric Charge in the Atom.
1 Announcements: Tutorials Tutorials: Monday 6-8pm Ryan Best Tuesday 4:30-6:30pm Christine Carlisle Wednesday 4:30-6:30pm Christine Carlisle Thursday.
Static Electricity, Electric Forces, Electric Fields.
Electromagnetism-1 (Electric Charge and Coulomb’s Law) by Dr. Adam A. Bahishti.
Electric Charge and Force Chapter 17.1 Notes. Electric Charge Electric charge is an electrical property of matter An object can have a negative charge,
Physics 114 Professor Fred Salsbury Office Hours: Tuesday 4-5 pm and Thursday 2:30-3:30 pm, or by appointment in 301A Olin Tutorials : TBA
Bell Ringer Using only the PVC, move the soda can, but you cannot touch the can with the PVC or blow on the can. Explain how you did it.
Static Electricity, Electric Forces, Electric Fields.
There are only two charges, positive and negative.
Electric Charge, Force and Field
Physics 16/21 electromagnetism
Properties of Electric Charge
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electrostatics Electric charges at rest (static electricity)
Coulomb Law.
Presentation transcript:

Vector Multiplication There are two ways (in 2 or 3D) to multiply vectors. Scalar product -> two vectors make a scalar A ●B =N Vector product -> two vectors make a vector A x B = C Also called the dot product or the inner product Also called the cross product, alternating product or the outer product

Scalar Product Scalar product -> two vectors make a scalar A ●B =ABcos  A ●B =a x b x +a y b y +a z b z Geometric Algebraic

Vector Product Vector product -> two vectors make a vector Geometric Algebraic C has magnitude absin  Direction perpendicular to the plane containing A and B. A x B = C A x B = (a y b z -b y a z )i+(a z b x -b z a x )j+(a x b y -b x a y )k

The right hand rule velocity v Magnetic Field B Force F F=q(v x B)

Electricity and Magnetism One of the four fundamental forces of nature Responsible for the vast majority of what we observe around us Probably best-understood and best-tested of the forces of nature Electromagnetic Interactions: Electricity and Electronics Magnetism Chemistry Biology and even more

Electrical Charges Electric forces only affect objects with charge Charge is measured in Coulombs (C). A Coulomb is a large unit of charge. 1 electron has -1.6 x C of charge. Charge comes in both positive and negative quantities Charge is conserved – it can neither be created nor destroyed Charge is usually denoted by the letter q. An object has a total charge of 5  C. It is divided into two pieces, one of which has charge 8  C and the other of which has charge A)3  C B)-3  C C)13  C D)Such a division is impossible

Matter and Charges All matter is made of positive and negative charges (or neutral) An object’s total charge is very close to zero When an object becomes charged, a tiny fraction of its charged particles (usually electrons) are lost or gained These particles (usually electrons) can flow through objects Conductor A material that allows electrons or other charged particles to flow freely Insulator A material that resists the flow of electrons and other charged particles What do you think of when you hear the words conductor or insulator?

Elementary Charge Charges exist in integer multiples of a fundamental charge unit called e We will consider e to be a positive number (some sources treat it as negative) e =  C the magnitude of the charge on an electron. the charge on a proton When you write that an atom or molecule has a charge +1, you mean +e. A partial charge means that a charge density can be modeled as having a charge at a location less than e

9 Charge Densities Charge can be localized to discrete points (point charges), or it may be spread out over a volume, a surface or a line Charge density  units C/m 3 Surface charge density  units C/m 2 Linear charge density units C/m A cube with side 1 cm has a charge density of  = 1 C/m 3. What is the charge of the cube? A)1 C B)0.01 C = 10 mC C)10 -4 C = 100  C D)10 -6 C = 1  C 1 cm

10 Coulomb’s Law Like charges repel, unlike charges attract Force is directly along a line joining the two charges q1q1 q2q2 r An inverse square law, just like gravity Can be attractive or repulsive – unlike gravity Constant is enormous compared to gravity  0 =  C 2 / (N●m 2 ) Permittivity of free space

11 Coulomb’s Law: Applied A Helium nucleus (charge +2e) is separated from one of its electrons (charge –e) by about 3.00  m. What is the force the nucleus exerts on the electron? Is it attractive or repulsive? r = 3.00  m q 1 =  C q 2 =  C k e =  10 9 N  m 2 /C 2 F e =  N Attractive Force We just calculated the force on the electron from the nucleus. How does this compare with the force on the nucleus from the electron? A)The force on the nucleus is twice as big B)The force on the nucleus is half as big C)The forces are equal in magnitude How does the acceleration of the nucleus compare to that of the electron? A)The acceleration of the nucleus is larger B)The acceleration of the nucleus is smaller C)The accelerations are equal.

12 Newton’s Laws and Kinematics Newton’s laws and all the kinematics you learned in 113 are still true! If a does not depend on time, then