Electricity Charge and Field Presentation 2003 R. McDermott.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Electric Charge & Electric Field
Advertisements

Electric Forces and Fields
Atoms are composed of Electrons – fundamental negatively charged (-) particle of matter (-1.6 x10-19C) 2. Protons – fundamental positively charged (+)
Unit 14: Electrostatics.
Electric Forces and Fields
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field
Day 2 Electrical Charging & Coulomb’s Law. Objectives Charging by Conduction Charging by Induction Electroscopes Coulomb’s Law.
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
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.
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.
Electric Forces and Fields Chapter 20. Charges and Forces Experiment 1 Nothing happens Nothing happens The objects are neutral The objects are neutral.
Ch 16: Electric Charge and Electric Field “Opposites attract” by Paula Abdul.
Ch 18: Electric Force & Electric Fields. The Origin of Electricity The electrical nature of matter comes from atomic structure Nucleus – made up of protons.
ELECTROSTATICS: The study of the behavior of stationary charges
Chapter 23 Electric Fields Summer 1996, Near the University of Arizona.
Charges, Qualitative: Electroscope l The Phenomena Charge electroscope with rubber rod which has been rubbed with fur. Leaves separate. »Bring same.
PHY1013S CHARGE Gregor Leigh
Static Electricity. Is all the charge the same or it is possible that there is more than one type?
Electric Charge and Electric Field Ch 16. Static Electicity Electricity comes from the Greek work elektron which means “amber”. Static Electricity = amber.
Chapter 1 Electric charge and electric forces Chapter 1.
AP Physics Summer Institute ELECTROSTATICS.
Chapter 20 Static Electricity Electrical Charge Charged objects –Like charges –Opposite charges –Experimenting with charge –Types of charge.
Lecture 2 Properties of Electric Charges Insulators and Conductors Coulomb’s Law Electric Field Problem Solving Strategy.
ELECTRIC FORCES AND ELECTRIC FIELDS
Coulomb’s Law Chapter 21 Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
ELECTRIC FIELDS. Protons Mass x kilograms Charge x Coulombs Electrons Mass 9.11 x kilograms Charge -1.6 x Coulombs.
Electrostatics. Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Chapter 23, part I 1. Electrical charge. 2. Coulomb’s Law about force between two point charges. 3. Application of Coulomb’s Law.
Chapter 16 Electric Forces and Electric Fields
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.
Introduction to Electrostatics Unit 14, Presentation 1.
Electric Fields and Forces IB Physics. Electric Charge “Charge” is a property of subatomic particles. Facts about charge: There are 2 types: positive.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Electric Forces and Electric Fields. Properties of Electric Charges Two types of charges exist Two types of charges exist They are called positive and.
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.
Electrostatics Unit 11. Electric Charge Symbol: q Unit: Coulomb (C) Two kinds of Charge: Positive Negative Law of Electrostatics: Like charges REPEL-
Chapter 32 Electrostatics.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
What Do All These Pictures Have In Common?
Chapter 20 Static Electricity What are Electrostatics? - the study of electric charges that can be collected and held in one place Like charges repel Opposite.
Electric Forces and Fields: Coulomb’s Law
My Chapter 16 Lecture Outline.
Electric Forces and Fields Chapter 17. Section 17-1 Objectives Understand the basic properties of electric charge Understand the basic properties of electric.
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.
Static Electricity Chapter 16 and 24. Review: The 4 Fundamental Forces Strong Force – The force that is involved in holding the nucleus of an atom together.
What Gives an Electric Charge? An imbalance of protons and electrons. An imbalance of protons and electrons. Neutral objects have equal numbers of electrons.
S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance.
Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields. The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. coulombs.
Ch. 21 The Electric Field I: Discrete Charge Distributions.
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Electricity Chapter 17. Chapter 17- Electric Charge The two different kinds of Electric charges are positive and negative Like charges repel – unlike.
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field. Units of Chapter 16 Static Electricity; Electric Charge and Its Conservation Electric Charge in the Atom.
Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields The Origin of Electricity The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. coulombs.
Static Electricity. All objects contain electrical charges. These charges come from three subatomic particles: ProtonsElectronsNeutrons.
Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields.
Electricity Chapter 17. Chapter 17- Electric Charge The two different kinds of Electric charges are positive and negative Like charges repel – unlike.
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 What are the fundamental particles and how do they interact?
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.
Electric Forces and Fields Chapter 18. ELECTRIC CHARGE Section 1.
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 17: Electrostatics
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Presentation transcript:

Electricity Charge and Field Presentation 2003 R. McDermott

Static Electricity Non-moving charges. Characteristic of insulators. Positive and negative charges. Protons in a solid can’t move. Changes in charge are due to electron transfer. Friction produces static electricity.

Two Kinds of Charge Unlike charges attract Like charges repel Both charges attract neutral objects Removing electrons results in positive charge (silk on glass). Adding electrons results in negative charge (fur on plastic).

Conservation of Charge Total charge is constant. Electrons transfer from more negative to less negative object. Most everyday objects are neutral (most atoms are neutral). Identical objects in contact develop the same charge.

Atoms Contain Charge Protons inside nucleus are positive. Electrons outside nucleus are negative. Proton and electron have same charge magnitude. Electrons can move within solid material

The Smallest Charge The charge on an electron (-1), or proton (+1) is one “elementary” charge. Which equals x Coulombs Charge is quantized Discrete amounts only 1e, 2e, 3e, 4e etc Quarks of sub-atomic physics have -1/3 and +2/3 charge

Producing Localized Charges Rubbing Inducing a nonsymmetrical charge distribution. Conduction Grounding (Induction) –Connect with wire leading to ground

Inducing a nonsymmetrical charge distribution. In the picture to the right, a negatively charged rod brought close causes electrons in the object to move away (downward). Even though the object is still neutral, its top is now slightly positive, and its leaves slightly negative as a result.

Inducing a nonsymmetrical charge distribution. In the picture to the right, a positively charged rod brought close causes electrons in the object to move toward it (upward). Even though the object is still neutral, its top is now slightly negative, and its leaves slightly positive as a result.

Charging by Conduction An object is charged by conduction if you touch a charged object to it, allowing electrons to be transferred. Using a negative object results in a negative charge. Using a positive object results in a positive charge, as shown to the right:

Charging by Induction An object is charged by induction if you touch a neutral object (ground) to it, while holding a charged object nearby. Using a negative object results in a positive charge. Using a positive object results in a negative charge, as shown to the right:

Electroscope Detects charge with leaves that repel or needle that rotates.

Charging by Induction

Insulators and Conductors Conductors carry charge easily –Metals have many free electrons –Ionic liquids –Plasmas Insulators conduct poorly –Dry gases –Wood, paper, cloth, glass, etc Semiconductors (silicon, germanium) are insulators that can be altered to conduct.

Coulomb’s Law Electric force is proportional to product of charges divided by square of distance between them Q in coulombs k is Coulomb constant k = 8.988x10 9 Nm 2 /C 2 constant    is the permittivity of free space Applies to point charges

Example 1 – Calculate Coulomb Force Find the force between two objects with charge 1 Coulomb at a separation of one meter. If their mass is 1 kg each, what is the gravitational force between them? How do the two forces compare? Ans.9x10 9 N Ans.6.7x N

Example 2 Find force between two, 1  -coulomb (10 -6 coulomb) charges at separation of 20 cm F = kQ 1 Q 2 /r 2 F = (9x10 9 N-m 2 /C 2 )(1x10 -6 C)(1x10 -6 C)/(0.20 m) 2 F = N

Electrostatic Force and Vectors F net = F 1 + F 2 + F 3 + … Principle of superposition of forces Use component method of vector addition F x = F 1x + F 2x F y = F 1y + F 2y

Recall: F 1x = F 1 cos  F 1y = F 1 sin  F = (F 1 + F 2 ) 1/2 Tan  F y /F x

Electric Field Force acting at a distance vs. field concept. Field, E, at a point is the force on a positive charge at that point divided by magnitude of that charge. Direction is the same as the direction of the force on a positive charge. The spacing of field lines indicates the strength of E.

Electric Field Strength Units: newtons per coulomb Defined as E = F/q E = kQ/r 2 is the field strength due to a point charge Q as measured at some point ‘r’ from Q.

Problem Solving Draw careful diagrams Apply Coulomb’s Law to get magnitude of forces or fields Determine direction of forces by considering like and unlike charges Show and label each vector force or field Add vectorially to get resultant Use symmetry when possible

Three Charges in a Line Each charge will experience two electric fields and therefore two forces; one from each of the other two charges. The net field (and force) will be the vector sum of those two fields (and forces).

Field due to 2 Like Charges

Field due to Unlike Charges

Fields and Conductors Field inside conductor is zero. If not, force F=qE would make charges move. Charge spreads out optimally on surface. Charge +Q inside spherical uncharged shell induces -Q on inside surface of shell. +Q then exists on outside surface of shell. Electric field just outside a conductor is always perpendicular to the surface.

Acknowledgements Zoomschool.com Glenbrook South Physics Fizzics Fizzle at Thinkquest.com Dr. Philip M. Dauber