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7.3 Electric field in vacuum

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1 7.3 Electric field in vacuum
7. Electrostatic field … 7.3 Electric field in vacuum 7.4 Motion of a charged particle in an electric field 7.5 Electric field in medium Direct current circuits 8.1 Electric current 8.2 Ohm’s law 8.3 Electromotive force and current circuits Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

2 the field of a point charge
Electric field: 14-9 Deff. the field of a point charge The field of a dipole 𝐸 = 𝐹 𝑄 0 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

3 iii) continuously distributed charge, quantities: 14-2, p.113
for charge distributed over a long wire β„“ : the linear charge density for charge distributed over a plane 𝑆: the surface charge density for charge distributed over a certain volume 𝑉: the volume charge density 𝑄= β„“ πœ†π‘‘β„“ πœ†= lim Ξ”β„“β†’0 βˆ†π‘„ Ξ”β„“ = 𝑑𝑄 𝑑ℓ 𝑄= 𝑆 πœŽπ‘‘π‘† 𝜎= lim Δ𝑆→0 βˆ†π‘„ Δ𝑆 = 𝑑𝑄 𝑑𝑆 𝑄= 𝑉 πœŒπ‘‘π‘‰ 𝜌= lim Δ𝑉→0 βˆ†π‘„ Δ𝑉 = 𝑑𝑄 𝑑𝑉 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

4  s <0 s >0 Homogeneous electrostatic field 14-6, example 2
𝐸 = 𝐹 𝑄 0 Homogeneous electrostatic field 14-6, example 2 = the field vector 𝐸 is in this region constant field of infinite sheet of charge distributed uniformly with a surface charge density s [C/m2], estimation: Two parallel plates with a charge density +s and – s, in distance d s <0 s >0 𝐸 (βˆ’) = 𝜎 2 πœ€ 0  𝐸=0 𝐸= 𝜎 πœ€ 0 𝐸=0 between infinite plates – homogeneous field, outside zero

5 the work by an el. force in el. field 𝐸 to move a charge Q from 𝐴→𝐡
𝐹 =𝑄 𝐸 Work and potential 14-8 the work by an el. force in el. field 𝐸 to move a charge Q from 𝐴→𝐡 El. field is conservative, we can introduce potential energy potential V – potential energy of an unit charge potential difference UAB (voltage) – difference between potentials π‘Š 𝐴→𝐡 =𝑄 𝐴 𝐡 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ 𝐸 𝑝 π‘Ÿ =𝑄 π‘Ÿ 𝐸 𝑝 =0 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ 𝑉( π‘Ÿ )= π‘Ÿ 𝑉=0 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ unit: V (volt) unit of el. field: Vm-1 scalar quantity describing el. field 𝑉( π‘Ÿ )= 𝐸 𝑝 ( π‘Ÿ ) 𝑄 π‘ˆ 𝐴𝐡 = 𝑉 𝐴 βˆ’ 𝑉 𝐡 π‘ˆ 𝐴𝐡 = 𝐴 𝐡 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

6 𝑉( π‘Ÿ )= π‘Ÿ 𝑉=0 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ board 𝑉 π‘Ÿ =π‘˜ 𝑄 π‘Ÿ 𝑉= 𝑖=1 𝑛 𝑉 𝑖 = 𝑖=1 𝑛 π‘˜ 𝑄 𝑖 π‘Ÿ 𝑖
𝑉( π‘Ÿ )= π‘Ÿ 𝑉=0 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ i) potential of a point charge board ii) potential of a group of point charges 𝑉 π‘Ÿ =π‘˜ 𝑄 π‘Ÿ V > 0 for Q > 0 to move a Q’ > 0 to infinity – the field perform a positive work V < 0 for Q < 0 to move a Q’ > 0 to infinity, positive work of external force, the field performs a negative work el. potential is a scalar, indirectly proportional to the distance not defined in a point charge, i.e. for r = 0 equipotential surface ≑ surface of constant potential 𝐸  equipotential surface (generally valid) 𝑉= 𝑖=1 𝑛 𝑉 𝑖 = 𝑖=1 𝑛 π‘˜ 𝑄 𝑖 π‘Ÿ 𝑖 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

7 iii) voltage between two infinite sheets, +s a – s, distance d board
π‘ˆ 𝐴𝐡 = 𝐴 𝐡 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ iii) voltage between two infinite sheets, +s a – s, distance d board π‘Š 𝐴𝐡 =𝑄 𝐴 𝐡 𝐸 βˆ™π‘‘ π‘Ÿ π‘ˆ=𝐸𝑑 the work to move a charge 𝑄 from one sheet do the second one: d π‘Š=π‘„π‘ˆ=𝑄𝐸𝑑 x Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

8 Motion of a charged particle in an el. field
Example: linear accelerator a charge Q of mass m enters hom. field with a velocity 𝑣 0 parallel to the field 𝐸 determine the velocity after passing a voltage U, board for 𝑣0 = 0 𝑣= 2π‘„π‘ˆ π‘š = 2𝑄𝐸𝑑 π‘š Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

9 El. dipole in a homogeneous el. filed 14-4 (p. 116)
Goal: state of motion of a dipole of el. dipole momentum p net force β†’ no translation only rotation: 𝐹 =𝑄 𝐸 𝐹 = 0 momentum of forces board potential energy 𝑀 = 𝑝 Γ— 𝐸 𝐸 𝑝 (𝛼)=βˆ’ 𝑝 βˆ™ 𝐸 𝑀=𝑝𝐸 sin 𝛼 𝐸 𝑝 (𝛼)=βˆ’π‘πΈ cos 𝛼 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

10 El. dipole in a homogeneous el. filed
important position of a dipole in hom. field el. dipole tends to rotate into stable equilibria 𝐸 𝑝 (𝛼)=βˆ’ 𝑝 βˆ™ 𝐸 𝑀 = 𝑝 Γ— 𝐸 𝐸 𝑝 𝛼 =βˆ’π‘πΈ cos 𝛼 𝑀=𝑝𝐸 sin 𝛼 stable equilibria Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

11 7.5 Electric field in medium 14-7, 14-12
conductors – some of charged particles can move β€œrather” freely statement: In static situation , the electric field inside 𝐸 = 0 . proof by contradiction consequence: The charge on conductor distributes itself on the outer surface. statement: The direction of 𝐸 close to surface is perpendicular to the surface. proof by contradiction insulators, dielectric – not vacuum and not conductor general direction - tangential component exists - motion of charges = contradiction β†’ Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

12 - p(molecule) = 0 p(molecule) β‰ 0 Dielectrics dielektrics polar
nonpolar p(molecule) = 0 nonpolar molecules when E β‰  0 Vm-1, p(molecule) β‰  0 polar effective center of + and – do not coincide - p(molecule) β‰ 0 polar molecules: p~10-30 Cm unit used in chemistry (debye): 1D=3, Cm + - without el. field any volume of dielectric is nonpolar (dipoles of molecules of polar dielectrics - thermal agitations) in external filed - polarization in nonpolar dielectrics – a slight net displacement of the effective centers of charge, the dipole is induced in polar dielectrics - 𝑝 aligns parallel to field (not perfectly, against it - thermal agitations) general description of the both cases the same Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

13 er – relative permittivity (no units)
polarization of dielectrics - a slab of dielectrics induced surface charges – bound in dielectrics, cannot move freely free charge – in conductor the net field in dielectrics – superposition of the field of the free and the surface charge: permittivity of medium πœ€=πœ€ π‘Ÿ πœ€ 0 relations in vacuum β†’ relations in dielectrics: e0 β†’ e examples board 𝐸 = 𝐸 𝐸 𝑃 er – relative permittivity (no units) er (vacuum)= 1 𝐸= 𝐸 0 βˆ’ 𝐸 𝑃 = 𝐸 0 πœ€ π‘Ÿ Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

14 S… area of each plate, s… surface charge density,
Capacitor 14-10 two conductors with charges +Q and –Q , the voltage between them is U Def. capacitance parallel-plate capacitors: ~ S ~ 1/d ~ er capacitance of a vacuum capacitor: capacitance of capacitor with dielectrics C = er C0 combination of capacitor in series in parallel 𝐢= 𝑄 π‘ˆ unit: F (farad) constant for given capacitor S… area of each plate, s… surface charge density, d…distance between the plates, charge on plates +Q, -Q board 𝐢= πœ€ 0 πœ€ π‘Ÿ 𝑆 𝑑 𝐢 0 = πœ€ 0 𝑆 𝑑 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

15 Energy of electrostatic field 14-11, p. 130, 131
𝐢= 𝑄 π‘ˆ Energy of electrostatic field 14-11, p. 130, 131 simplified: energy of the el. field in parallel-plate capacitor energy ≑ work done to charge it on voltage π‘ˆ board energy density w = energy per unit volume valid generally in the field E π‘Š= 𝑄 2 𝐢 = 1 2 𝐢 π‘ˆ 2 𝑀= 1 2 πœ€ π‘Ÿ πœ€ 0 𝐸 2 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

16 8. Direct current circuits 15
8.1 Electric current 15-1 electrodynamics electric current – definition of process directed motion of electric charges (conductors in an electric field) Def. of quantity: i (t), I Def: current density – vector which is characteristic of a point in conductor rather than a conductor a net charge that passes trough a cross section of conductor in the time unit unit of electric current A (ampere) unit of charge C=A s positive direction of current ≑ direction of movement of positive charges 𝐼= lim βˆ†π‘‘β†’0 βˆ†π‘„ βˆ†π‘‘ = 𝑑𝑄 𝑑𝑑 direction that positive charge carrier would move in the point 𝑑𝐼= 𝑗 βˆ™π‘‘ 𝑆 𝐼= 𝑆 𝑗 βˆ™π‘‘ 𝑆 el. current is a flow of the current density vector thorough cross section 𝑆 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

17 interpretation in a simple case:
unit of current density: A m-2 𝐼= 𝑆 𝑗 βˆ™π‘‘ 𝑆 el. current is a flow of the current density vector thorough 𝑗= 𝐼 𝑆 𝐼= 𝑑𝑄 𝑑𝑑 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

18 current trough metal conductors is proportional to the applied voltage
8.2 Ohm’s law 15-2 relation between current and voltage, originally for metal conductors 𝐼= π‘ˆ 𝑅 current trough metal conductors is proportional to the applied voltage 𝑅 … resistance of wire, unit Ξ© (ohm) = V/A π‘ˆ=𝑅𝐼 Ohm’s law not valid for semiconductors, transistors, vacuum tubes, etc. so called nonohmic materials resistance for a uniform metal wire of lengths β„“ and cross section 𝑆: Resistance dependence on temperature (metal wires) 𝑅= 1 𝜎 β„“ 𝑆 =𝜚 β„“ 𝑆 𝜎 … conductivity, 𝜎= 1 𝜚 𝜚 … resistivity, [r] = m, depends on material 𝜚 𝑇 … resistivity at temperature 𝑇 𝜚 0 … known resistivity at standard temperature 𝑇 0 𝛼 … the temperature coefficient of resistivity; for metals 𝛼>0, for semiconductors 𝛼<0 𝛼 for semiconductors can be <0 𝜌 𝑇 = 𝜌 0 1+𝛼 π‘‡βˆ’ 𝑇 0 Physics I-2019, Lecture 8

19 8.3 Electromotive force and current circuits
Physics I-2019, Lecture 8


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