Phys102 Lecture 2 The Electric Field

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field
Advertisements

Electric Charges and Electric Fields
© 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.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field.
16.6 Solving Problems Involving Coulomb’s Law and Vectors Vector addition review:
© 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 Electric Charge and Electric Field
© 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
The Electric Field. The electric field E at a point in space is defined as an electric force F, acting on a positive test charge q divided by the magnitude.
Chapter 22 Electric Field
Physics Lecture 3 Electrostatics Electric field (cont.)
Electric Field. Analogy The electric field is the space around an electrical charge just like a gravitational field is the space around a mass.
Electric Fields Physics.
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electrostatics. Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Chapter 16 Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 – Electricity & Magnetism (Electrostatics) a. Electric Charge, Electric Field & Gauss’ Law.
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field © 2008 Giancoli, PHYSICS,6/E © Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc.,
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.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electric Field Physics Overview Properties of Electric Charges Charging Objects by Induction Coulomb’s Law The Electric Field Electric Field Lines.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field HW #4: Chapter 21: Pb.21,Pb.38, Pb.40, Pb.52, Pb.59, Pb.80 Due Friday, Feb 20.
The Electric Field The electric field is present in any region of space if there exists electric forces on charges. These electric forces can be detected.
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field © 2002, B.J. Lieb Giancoli, PHYSICS,5/E © Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education,
1.Electrostatics Electric Field. The Electric Field is defined as the force on a test charge (small positive charge), divided by the charge: EE F F Electric.
1) Electric Charge I 1) one is positive, the other is negative 2) both are positive 3) both are negative 4) both are positive or both are negative Two.
Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields The Origin of Electricity The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. coulombs.
Electric Field. The Concept of the Electric Field  In the force model of the electric field, the positive charge A exerts an attractive force on charge.
Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields.
© 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.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields The Origin of Electricity The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. coulombs.
There are only two charges, positive and negative.
Quick Write What are the different parts of a wave?
PHYS 1444 – Section 003 Lecture #4
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Electric Field Physics Mrs. Coyle.
Physics: Principles with Applications, 6th edition
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Physics: Principles with Applications, 6th edition
The Electric Field Figure Force exerted by charge Q on a small test charge, q, placed at points A, B, and C.
Day 5: Objectives Electric Field Lines
Gauss’ Law Symmetry ALWAYS TRUE!
Lecture 01: Electric Fields & Forces
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Gauss’ Law Symmetry ALWAYS TRUE!
Electric Field Physics Mrs. Coyle.
Electric Fields and Forces
PHYSICS 2415 Suggested strategies: Read text before lecture
Electric Field Physics Mr. Goddard.
Unit 6: Electrostatics Concept Review
1. ConcepTest 16.1a Electric Charge I
Question for the day Can the magnitude of the electric charge be calculated from the strength of the electric field it creates?
ConcepTest Clicker Questions College Physics, 7th Edition
ConcepTest 21.2a Conductors I
Chapter 22 Electric Field
Electric Forces and Fields
Electrostatics.
to a positively charged glass rod
The field lines for a positive point charge
Chapter 21, Electric Charge, and electric Field
Textbook: 7.1, 7.2 Homework: pg # 2 – 6
Presentation transcript:

Phys102 Lecture 2 The Electric Field Key Points Coulomb’s Law The electric field (E is a vector!) References Textbook: 16-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,+.

The Electric Field The electric field is defined as the force on a small charge, divided by the magnitude of the charge: Figure 21-22. Force exerted by charge Q on a small test charge, q, placed at points A, B, and C.

The Electric Field An electric field surrounds every charge. Figure 21-21. An electric field surrounds every charge. P is an arbitrary point.

The Electric Field For a point charge:

The Electric Field Force on a point charge in an electric field: Figure 21-23. (a) Electric field at a given point in space. (b) Force on a positive charge at that point. (c) Force on a negative charge at that point.

Example: Electric field above two point charges. Calculate the total electric field (a) at point A and (b) at point B in the figure due to both charges, Q1 and Q2. Solution: The geometry is shown in the figure. For each point, the process is: calculate the magnitude of the electric field due to each charge; calculate the x and y components of each field; add the components; recombine to give the total field. a. E = 4.5 x 106 N/C, 76° above the x axis. b. E = 3.6 x 106 N/C, along the x axis.

Example: Electric field above two point charges. Calculate the total electric field (a) at point A and (b) at point B in the figure due to both charges, Q1 and Q2. Solution: The geometry is shown in the figure. For each point, the process is: calculate the magnitude of the electric field due to each charge; calculate the x and y components of each field; add the components; recombine to give the total field. a. E = 4.5 x 106 N/C, 76° above the x axis. b. E = 3.6 x 106 N/C, along the x axis.

Problem solving in electrostatics: electric forces and electric fields Draw a diagram; show all charges, with signs, and electric fields and forces with directions. Calculate forces using Coulomb’s law. Add forces vectorially to get result. Check your answer!

Field Lines The electric field can be represented by field lines. These lines start on a positive charge and end on a negative charge. Figure 21-33. Electric field lines (a) near a single positive point charge, (b) near a single negative point charge.

Field Lines The number of field lines starting (ending) on a positive (negative) charge is proportional to the magnitude of the charge. The electric field is stronger where the field lines are closer together.

Field Lines Electric dipole: two equal charges, opposite in sign:

Field Lines The electric field between two closely spaced, oppositely charged parallel plates is constant.

Field Lines Summary of field lines: Field lines indicate the direction of the field; the field is tangent to the line. The magnitude of the field is proportional to the density of the lines. Field lines start on positive charges and end on negative charges; the number is proportional to the magnitude of the charge.

Electric Fields and Conductors The static electric field inside a conductor is zero – if it were not, the charges would move. The net charge on a conductor resides on its outer surface. Figure 21-36. A charge inside a neutral spherical metal shell induces charge on its surfaces. The electric field exists even beyond the shell, but not within the conductor itself.

Electric Fields and Conductors The electric field is perpendicular to the surface of a conductor – again, if it were not, charges would move. Figure 21-37. If the electric field at the surface of a conductor had a component parallel to the surface E||, the latter would accelerate electrons into motion. In the static case, E|| must be zero, and the electric field must be perpendicular to the conductor’s surface: E = E┴.

Electric Fields and Conductors Conceptual Example: Shielding, and safety in a storm. A neutral hollow metal box is placed between two parallel charged plates as shown. What is the field like inside the box? The field inside the box is zero. This is why it can be relatively safe to be inside an automobile during an electrical storm.

i-clicker quiz 2-1 A) positive B) negative C) neutral D) positive or neutral E) negative or neutral A metal ball hangs from the ceiling by an insulating thread. The ball is attracted to a positive-charged rod held near the ball. The charge of the ball must be:

Van de Graaff Generator The electric field is defined as the force on a small charge, divided by the magnitude of the charge: Figure 21-22. Force exerted by charge Q on a small test charge, q, placed at points A, B, and C.

i-clicker 2-2 Two neutral conductors are connected by a wire and a charged rod is brought near, but does not touch. The wire is taken away, and then the charged rod is removed. What are the charges on the conductors? A) 0 0 B) + – C) – + D) + + E) – – ?

i-clicker 2-3 A) 3/4 N B) 3.0 N C) 12 N D) 16 N E) 48 N Q F1 = 3 N F2 = ? 4Q Q F1 = ? F2 = ? If we increase one charge to 4Q, what is the magnitude of F1?

i-clicker 2-4 The force between two charges separated by a distance d is F. If the charges are pulled apart to a distance 3d, what is the force on each charge? A) 9F B) 3F C) F D) 1/3F E) 1/9F Q F d ? 3d

i-clicker 2-5 You are sitting a certain distance from a point charge, and you measure an electric field of E0. If the charge is doubled and your distance from the charge is also doubled, what is the electric field strength now? A) 4E0 B) 2E0 C) E0 D) 1/2E0 E) 1/4E0

i-clicker 2-6 4 3 2 1 +Q -Q 5 What is the direction of the electric field at the position of the X ? A) 1 B) 2 C) 3 D) 4 E) 5