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Page 1: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electrostatics

Page 2: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Learning Objectives

• The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a)

• The interaction of two particles can be described as: the creation of a field by one of the particles and the interaction of the field with the second particle (SOL 12.b).

Page 3: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

• Magnitude of charge on protons and electrons are exactly the same– Protons have a positive charge– Electrons have a negative charge

• Neutral atoms contain equal numbers of protons and electrons

Page 4: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Insulators and ConductorsNeed to know

• Insulator: electrons are bound very tightly to the nuclei. Wood and rubber are good insulators.

• Conductor: electrons are bound very loosely and can move about freely. They are often referred to free electrons. Metals are good conductors.

• Semiconductor: very few free electrons (silicon, germanium and carbon)

Page 5: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Static Electricity

• You have probably experienced a charge lately (comb, dryer, carpet, car seat, …)

• An object becomes charged due to a rubbing process and is said to possess a net electric charge

• An item containing a net positive charge has lost electrons

• An item containing a net negative charge has gained electrons

Page 6: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Law of Conservation of Electric Charge

Need to know

The net amount of electric charge produced in any process is zero

If one object or one region of space acquires a positive charge, then an equal amount of

negative charge will be found in neighboring areas or objects

Page 7: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Unlike Charges Attract;Like Charges Repel

Need to know

Page 8: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

3 Ways to Charge an ObjectNeed to know

1. Friction: Rubbing two objects together with different electron attachment. Heat generated frees electrons to join object with stronger attachment.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 9: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

3 Ways to Charge an ObjectNeed to know

2. Conduction: Electrons are transferred from one object to another by touching. Usually it involves moving from one electric potential to another.

John TraVOLTa Demo

Page 10: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

3 Ways to Charge an ObjectNeed to know

3. Induction: Rod does not touch sphere. It pushes electrons out of the back side of the sphere and down the wire to ground. The ground wire is disconnected to prevent the return of the electrons from ground, then the rod is removed.

Page 11: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electromagnetism

• One of the four fundamental forces of the universe (electromagnetism, gravity, weak nuclear and strong nuclear forces)

• The forces that act between atoms and molecules to hold them together are electrical forces

• Elastic, normal and contact forces (pushes and pulls) result from electric forces acting at the atomic level

Page 12: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Forces resulting from charges

• Charges push and pull on one another

• Closer the charge the higher the force

• The stronger the charge the higher the force

Page 13: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Coulomb’s LawNeed to know

The magnitude of the force between charge qA and charge qB, separated a distance d, is proportional to the magnitude of the charge and inversely proportional to the square of the distance:

F = K qAqB

d2

d

qA qB

Page 14: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Coulomb’s Law: Key FactsNeed to know

The charge of an electron is:-1.60 x 10-19 coulombs (C)

The charge of a proton is:1.60 x 10-19 coulombs (C)

The charge, q, is measured in coulombs. The distance, d, is measured in meters. The force, F, is measured in newtons.

The constant, K = 9.0 x 109 Nm2/C2

Page 15: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Problem Solving Strategy

1. Sketch the system showing all distances

2. Diagram the vectors

3. Use Coulomb’s law to find the magnitude of the force. Note: it is unnecessary to include the sign of the charges or the distance. The answer is always positive.

4. Use your diagram along with trigonometric relations to find the direction of the force

Page 16: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Example Problem 1

Two charges are separated by 3.0 cm. Object A has a charge of +6.0 C, while object B has a charge of +3.0 C. What is the force on object A?

Known: Unknown:

qA = +6.0 x 10-6 C FB on A = ?

qB = +3.0 x 10-6 Cd = 0.030 m

Page 17: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Example 1 Solution

F = K qAqB

d2

= (9.0 x 109 Nm2/C2)(6.0 x 10-6C)(3.0 x 10-6C)

(3.0 x 10-2 m)2

FB on A = 1.8 x 102 N

Page 18: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Example 2: Three Charges

• Given:

• Find the net force on the -2 µC charge

• Known:

-2 µC+6 µC 2 µC

6 cm 2 cm

Page 19: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

FA on B= KqAqB

d2

= (9x109 Nm2

C2)(6x10-6 C)(2x10-6 C)(0.06 m)2

= - 30 N

FC on B= KqCqB

d2

= (9x109 Nm2

C2)(2x10-6 C)(2x10-6 C)(0.02 m)2

= + 90

FNet = FA on B + FC on B = - 30 N + 90 N = 60 N

-2 µC+6 µC 2 µC

6 cm 2 cm

Page 20: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Example Problem 3

A sphere with a charge 6.0 C is located near two other charged spheres. A -3.0 C is located 4.00 cm to the right and a 1.5 C sphere is located 3.00 cm directly underneath. Determine the net force on the 6.0 C sphere.

A

qA= 6 C

qc = 1.5 C

qB = -3 C

C

BdAB

dAC

FB on A

FC on AFnet

Page 21: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Example 3 Solution

FB on A =

FC on A =

Fnet =

=

FB on A

FC on AFnet

A

qA= 6 C

qc = 1.5 C

qB = -3 C

C

BdAB

dAC

Page 22: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Static Charge Generator

Page 23: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Field Need to know

• An electric field extends outward from every charge and permeates all of space

Page 24: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Investigating the Electric Field

• We can quantify the strength of an electric field by measuring the force on a small positive test charge– So small that the force it exerts does not

significantly alter the distribution of the charges that create the field

aqA+

+qB

Page 25: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Field

• An electric field, E, at any point is defined as the force, F, exerted on a tiny positive test charge at that point divided by the magnitude of the test charge:

E = F/qB

qA+

+qB

Page 26: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Field Equation

E = F/qB

E = K qB qA/r2

qB

E = KqA/r2

qA+

+qB

Page 27: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Field Lines

• Drawn so that they indicate the direction of the force due to the given field on a positive charge

qA+

+qB

Page 28: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Field LinesNeed to Know

Lines indicate direction of the force due to the given field on a positive test charge

Page 29: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Properties of Field LinesNeed to know

1. The field lines indicate the direction of the electric field

2. The lines are drawn so that the magnitude of the electric field, E, is proportional to the number of lines crossing unit area perpendicular to the lines. The closer the lines, the stronger the field.

3. Electric field lines start on positive charges and end on negative charges

Page 30: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Electric Potential DifferenceNeed to know

V = Won q’ = PE: Potential difference often q’ q’ referred to as Voltage

Electric Potential Difference Units: Volt =J/C

g

BigNegativeCharge

+

+Edisplacement displacement

W = Fd = mgd W = Vq

Page 31: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Typical Voltages

SourceThundercloud to ground

High voltage power line

Power supply for TV tube

Auto ignition

Household outlet

Auto battery

Resting potential across nerve membrane

Potential changes on skin

(EKG)

Voltage108 V

106 V

104 V

104 V

102 V

12 V

10-1 V

10-4 V

Page 32: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

CapacitorsNeed to Know

• A capacitor is a device that can store electric charge

• Consists of two conducting objects placed near each other but not touching

• They store charge for later use• Usage: camera flash, energy

back-up for computers and as surge protectors

Page 33: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Capacitors

• Consists of a pair of parallel plates of area, A, and separated by a small distance d.

• In a diagram, they are represented by the symbol:

• If a voltage is applied to a capacitor, one plate acquires a negative charge and the other an equal amount of positive charge.

Page 34: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

CapacitorsNeed to Know

• The amount of charge acquired by each plate is proportional to the potential difference

Q = CV• Where C is constant and is called the

capacitance of the capacitor• Unit: Coulombs/Volt = Farad

– Typical capacitor range is 1pF (10-12) to 1F (10-6)

Page 35: Electrostatics Learning Objectives The electrostatic force (Coulomb’s Law) can be either repulsive or attractive (SOL 12.a) The interaction of two particles

Determining Capacitance

• Constant for a given a capacitor• Depends on structure and dimensions of he

capacitor itself:

C = o A/dA = area

d = separation distance between plates

o = 8.85 x 10-12 C2/Nm2

= permittivity of free space