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1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 1 PHYS117B: Lecture 2 3 things to remember about the electric charge  Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter.

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Presentation on theme: "1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 1 PHYS117B: Lecture 2 3 things to remember about the electric charge  Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter."— Presentation transcript:

1 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 1 PHYS117B: Lecture 2 3 things to remember about the electric charge  Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter  Electric charge is quantized: the smallest unit is q e = 1.6 x 10 -19 C  The net electric charge is conserved. Even if you create new particles converting energy to mass (like in the picture from RHIC) you always produce +/- particle pairs. Au+Au ~ thousand charged particles, but the NET charge is conserved

2 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 2 Last lecture: There are 2 and only 2 types of electric charge. We proved that by observing that neutral bodies do not interact with neutral bodies, while all other combinations (+/-,+/+,-/-,+/0,-/0) did. Note that this is NOT a trivial statement. Gravity has only 1 type of mass, the strong force that acts between the quarks and gluons inside the protons and the neutrons has color charges: there are red, blue, green and anti-red, anti-blue, anti-green (total of 6 color charges). We learned how to charge an object ( by rubbing it we break some molecular bonds and sweep electrons from one body to the other) or by touching a neutral conductor with a charged conductor We learned about polarization (in insulators) and induced charge( in conductors)

3 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 3 Electric Force and Electric Field Now it is time to get quantitative How big is the force between two charges? How does it compare to other forces in nature ? What if we have more than 2 bodies (charges) interacting ? How does the force change ?  Principle of superposition How does a charge “feel” another charge at a distance ? Introduce the electric field. Calculate the electric field for different charge configurations ( we’ll start today and do more on Monday)

4 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 4 Let’s start with the force:

5 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 5 How big is the electric force compared to gravity ? Calculate the ratio of: F c /F g for 2 protons Calculate the ratio of F c /F g for 1 proton and the Earth Calculate F c /F g for 2 objects like the Earth  Done on the blackboard. See also example 21.1 in the book

6 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 6 The electric force is a vector 1. It has magnitude and direction (have to consider both) 2. When more than 1 force act simultaneously on 1 body, the forces add following the rules for vector addition 3. There are applets on MP : you can play with an applet to get a feeling of how the electric force depends on distance, charge and how vectors add together.

7 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 7 Electric field Every charge creates electric field in every point in space. This is a VECTOR field

8 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 8

9 1/11/2008 J.Velkovska, PHYS117B 9 Field of an electric dipole: Use Coulomb’s law and the principle of superposition to find the electric field in points a, b and c.


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