s-113 define these terms a.charge b.potential difference (voltage) c.current (amps) d.resistance

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S-113 Define these terms A. Charge B. Potential Difference (Voltage) C. Current (Amps) D. Resistance

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Page 1: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

S-113

Define these terms

A. Charge

B. Potential Difference (Voltage)

C. Current (Amps)

D. Resistance

Page 2: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Objective

I can define electric field in terms of the force on the test charge

I can calculate the magnitude and direction of the force on a positive or negative charge placed in a specified field

Page 3: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

AP Physics

Chapter 16

Page 4: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.1 Static Electricity

Page 5: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.1 Static Electricity

Static electricity – not moving

Two types of charge

positive (+) when electrons are lost

negative (-) when electrons are gained

Objects can gain charges by rubbing

16.1

Page 6: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.1 Static Electricity

Like charges repel

Unlike charges attract

Law of Conservation of electric charge – the net amount of electric charge produced in a process is zero

16.1

Page 7: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.2 Electric Charge in the Atom

Page 8: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.2 Electric Charge in the Atom

Atoms are made of

positive protons

negative electrons

Electrons move from

one object to another when the objects

are rubbed

Eventually charges bleed off

objects because water

molecules are polar 16.2

Page 9: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.3 Insulators and Conductors

Page 10: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.3 Insulators and Conductors

Conductors – outer

electrons of atoms

are free to move

through the

material

Insulator – electrons

tightly held, do

not move

16.3

Page 11: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.3 Insulators and Conductors

Semiconductors – conduct electricity under some circumstances, don’t under other conditions

16.3

Page 12: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.4 Induced Charge; the Electroscope

Page 13: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.4 Induced Charge; the Electroscope

Induction – charging without

contact

Object is brought near a

charged object

Electrons move

Object is grounded

An electroscope measures if

an object has a charge on

it16.4

Page 14: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.5 Coulomb’s Law

Page 15: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.5 Coulomb’s Law

Electric charges apply forces to each other

From experiments

Force is proportional

to charge

Inversely proportional

to square of distance

16.5

1 22

q qF k

r

9 2 28.988 10 /k x Nm C

Page 16: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.5 Coulomb’s Law

Equation – gives magnitude of force

Opposite charges – force directed toward

each other

Like charges – force directed away from each

other

Charge is measured in Coulombs

16.5

Page 17: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

S-114

A mad scientist charges two objects that are 2.45 cm apart. If the measured force between them is 120 N, toward each other, what is the magnitude of the charges (assume they are both the same charge)

Page 18: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Objective

I can determine the force that acts between specified point charges.

Page 19: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Homework Problem

Page 20: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Practice Problem

A 10C charge is placed so that x=0m and a second charge of -20C is placed so that it x=5m. Where must a third charge of 5C be placed so that the net force on the charge is zero.

Page 21: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.5 Coulomb’s Law

1 Coulomb is the amount of charge, that if placed 1 m apart would result in a force of 9x109 N

Charges are quantized – that is they come in discrete values

The constant k relates to the constant called the permittivity of free space

16.5

191.602 10e x C

12 2 20 8.85 10 /x C Nm

Page 22: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.5 Coulomb’s Law

AP tends to write k as

We will assume that charges are point charges - size is negligible

16.5

0

1

4k

Page 23: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.6 Solving Problems Involving Coulomb’s Laws and Vectors

Page 24: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.6 Coulomb’s Law and Vectors

Principle of Superposition – Electrostatic forces are added just like any other force

As vectors

16.6

Page 25: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Practice Problem

Three charges are placed in space. The first charge has a value of 5nC. The second is placed 3 m above the first and has a value of -8nC. The third has a value of 2nC and is placed 4 m to the right of the first. What is the net force on the 5nC charge?

16.6

Page 26: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Practice Problem

Using the same charges as the previous problem, what is the net force on the -8nC charge?

16.6

Page 27: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Practice Problem

4 charges, each with a value of 5C are placed at the corners of a square 2 m on a side. What is the net force on the charge in the upper right corner?

16.6

Page 28: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Practice Problem

4 charges, each with a value of 5C are placed at the corners of a square 2 m on a side. What is the net force on the charge in the upper right corner?

16.6

Page 29: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.7 The Electric Field

Page 30: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.7 The Electric Field

Electrical forces act over distances

Field forces, like gravity

Michael Faraday

electric field – extends

outward from every charge

and permeates all of space

The field is defined by the force

it applies to a test charge

placed in the field16.7

Page 31: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.7 The Electric Field

The Electric field would then be

Or

q is the test charge

We can also say that

Remember that E is independent of the test charge.

The electric field is also a vector (free body diagrams are probably a good idea)

16.7

2r

kqE

q

FE

EqF

Page 32: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

S-112

A 3 mc charge is on the right, and a -2 mc charge on the left. They are 0.8 m apart. What is the field strength .2 m from the right?

Page 33: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.8 Field Lines

Page 34: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.8 Field Lines

To visualize electric fieldsDraw electric field linesDirection of the lines is the direction of force on a positive test chargeThe density of the lines indicates relative strength of the fieldNote: the field density increase as you get closer

16.8

Page 35: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.8 Field Lines

For multiple charges, keep in mind

1. Field lines indicate the direction of the field

The actual field is tangent to the field lines

2. The magnitude of the field is relative to the field line density

3. Fields start at positive and end at negatives

16.8

Field Lines

Page 36: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.8 Field Lines

If the field is produced by two closely spaced parallel plates

The field density is constant

So the electric field is

constant

16.8

Page 37: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

Electric Charge and Electric Field

16.9 Electric Fields and Conductors

Page 38: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

16.9 Electric Fields and Conductors

For a conductor

1. The electric field inside a

conductor is zero (static)

2. Any net charge is distributed on the surface of a conductor

3. Electric field is always

perpendicular to the surface of a conductor

2. Charges concentrate at the

area of greatest

curvature 16.9

Page 39: S-113 Define these terms A.Charge B.Potential Difference (Voltage) C.Current (Amps) D.Resistance

S-113

Four charges, each of 1.2 nC are placed on the corners of a square 2.5 cm per side. What is the magnitude and direction of the electric field on the upper right corner? What is the force on the charge in that corner?