Title: Electric Charge and the Electric Field (Ch 26)
1Electric Charge and the Electric Field (Ch 26)
- Four Fundamental Forces
- Electromagnetic
- Gravity
- Strong Nuclear Force
- Weak Nuclear Force
2Electric Charge
- Electricity Elektron (amber)
- Amber (tree resin) gets a charge when rubbed with
cloth - Ben Franklin
- Positive Charge on a rubber rod
- Negative Charge on an amber/plastic rod
3(No Transcript)
4Electric Charge
- Law of conservation of charge Charge is never
created or destroyed
Cloth
-
-
-
-
-
-
Rubber rod
5Insulators/Conductors
Insulators Semiconductors Conductors
Do not conduct electricity Conduct electricity, but only at a higher voltage Conduct electricity well
Small atoms Electrons tightly held Non-Metals Medium atoms Electrons held medium Metalloids Large atoms Electrons not tightly held Metals
6(Discuss movement of the electrons)
7Conduction
- Transfer of charge by touching
- Electrons can flow between substances
- Can produce a net charge on the substance
8Induction
- Transfer of charge without touching
- Electrons migrate within the substance to cause a
separation of charge - Net charge on substance is still zero
9Induction Grounding
- Only way to produce a net charge by induction
- Earth can easily absorb or donate electrons
- Electrons can leave a substance, then break the
ground
10Electroscope
11Charging the electroscope
by induction by conduction (charge
separation) (net charge)
12Using the electroscope
- Can be used to detect the charge on a substance
- (Must charge electroscope first)
13Coulombs Law
- Coloumb experimented to determine magnitude of
electromagnetic force - Measured the forces between charged spheres
(angle of deflection).
14- F k Q1Q2
- r2
- F Force
- k 9.0 X 109 N-m/C2 (proportionality constant)
- Q Charge (C)
- r Radius (m)
- Varies with inverse-square of the radius(distance)
15The Coulomb
- 1 Coulomb 1 Amperesecond
- Unit of charge
- Point charges small objects (charge doesnt get
distributed much) - Elementary Charge
- Charge on the electron and proton
- Quantized (cant have ½ an electron)
- e 1.602 X 10-19 C
16- Determine the magnitude of the force between a
proton and an electron in a hydrogen atom.
Assume the distance from the electron to the
nucleus is 0.53 X 10-10 m. (8.2 X 10-8 N)
-
17- Calculate the force between an electron and the
three protons in a Li atom if the distance is
about 1.3 X 10-10 m. (3.9 X 10-8 N)
18- Three charged particles are arranged in a
straight line as shown in the diagram. Calculate
the net force on particle 3. (-1.5 to the left)
0.30 m
0.20 m
-
-
Q1 -8.0 mC Q2 3.0 mC Q3 -4.0 mC
19- F k Q1Q2
- r2
- F31 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2 )(4.0X 10-6 C)(8.0X10-6
C) - (0.50 m)2
- F31 1.2 N (Repulsive to the right)
- F32 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2 )(4.0X 10-6 C)(3.0X10-6
C) - (0.20 m)2
- F32 2.7 N (Attractive to the left)
20- Fnet F31 - F32
- Fnet 1.2 N 2.7 N -1.5 to the left
21- Three charges are in a line. The first is 2.00
mC. The second is -2.50 mC at 25 cm. The third
charge is 2.00 mC at the 40 cm mark. - Calculate the net force on the center charge.
- Will the center charge move to the left or right?
22- Three charges are in a line. The first is 3.00
mC. The second is -2.00 mC at 5 cm. Where
should a the third charge (4.0 mC) be placed so
the middle charge does not move?
23- Three charges are in a line. The first is -10.00
mC. The second is -15.00 mC at 100 cm. Where
should a middle charge (20.0 mC) be placed so it
does not move?
24Coulombs Law Ex 4
- What is the resultant force on charge q3 if the
charges are arranged as shown below. The
magnitudes of the charges are - q1 6.00 X 10-9 C
- q2 -2.00 X 10-9 C
- q3 5.00 X 10-9 C
254.00 m
-
q2
q3
37o
3.00 m
5.00 m
q1
26- First calculate the forces on q3 separately
- F13 k Q1Q3
- r2
- F13 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(6.00 X 10-9 C)(5.00 X
10-9 C) - (5.00m )2
- F13 1.08 X 10-8 N
27- F23 k Q2Q3
- r2
- F23 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(2.00 X 10-9 C)(5.00 X
10-9 C) - (4.00m )2
- F23 5.62 X 10-9 N
28F13 1.08 X 10-8 N
F23 5.62 X 10-9 N
37o
-
q2
q3
37o
q1
29- F13x F13cos37o (1.08 X 10-8 N)cos37o
- F13x 8.63 X 10-9 N
- F13y F13sin37o (1.08 X 10-8 N)sin37o
- F13y 6.50 X 10-9 N
- Fx F23 F13x
- Fx -5.62 X 10-9 N 8.63 X 10-9 N 3.01 X
10-9 N - Fy F13y 6.50 X 10-9 N
30- Fx 3.01 X 10-9 N
- Fy 6.50 X 10-9 N
- FR \/ (3.01 X 10-9 N)2 (6.50 X 10-9 N)2
- FR 7.16 X 10-9 N
- sin q Fy/FR
- sin q (6.50 X 10-9 N)/ (7.16 X 10-9 N)
- q 64.7o
FR
Fy
Fx
q
-
31Coulombs Law Ex 5
- Calculate the net electrostatic force on charge
Q3 as shown in the diagram
Q3 65 mC
60 cm
30 cm
30o
-
Q2 50 mC
Q1 -86 mC
32- First calculate the forces on Q3 separately
- F13 k Q1Q3
- r2
- F13 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(65 X 10-6 C)(86 X 10-6
C) - (0.60 m )2
- F13 140 N
- F23 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(65 X 10-6 C)(50 X 10-6
C) - (0.30 m )2
- F23 330 N
33F23
Q3
F13
30o
-
Q2
Q1
34- F13x F13cos30o (140 N)cos30o
- F13x 120 N
- F13y -F13sin30o (140 N)sin30o
- F13y -70 N
- Fx F13x 120 N
- F7 330 N - 70 N 260 N
35- Fx 120 N
- Fy 260 N
- FR \/ (120 N)2 (330 N)2
- FR 290 N
- sin q Fy/FR
- sin q (260 N)/ (290 N)
- q 64o
FR
Fy
Fx
q
-
36- A small plastic bead has a mass of 15 mg and a
charge of -10 nC (nano 10-9). A glass rod of
charge 10 nC is held 1.0 cm above the bead. - Calculate the electric field strength of the rod
at the position of the bead. - Calculate the force on the bead.
- Will the bead leap off the table?
37Calculus Example 1
- Calculate the force on charge q from the charged
rod shown below. The charge per unit length of
the rod is l Q/l
38- F kqQ
- x2
- dF kqdQ dQ ldx
- x2
- dF kqldx
- x2
- F kql ? dx (from a to al)
- x2
- F -kql 1 a l
- x a
39- F -kql 1 a l
- x a
- F -kql 1 - l
- a1 a
- F kqll
- a(a1)
40Calculus Ex 2
- A total positive charge of Q is evenly
distributed on a semicircular ring of radius R.
Calculate the force felt by the charge q at the
center of the semicircle.
41- F kqQ
- R2
- However, x-components cancel
- Fy Fsinq
- Fy kqQ sinq
- R2
- Break into a small unit of force
- dFy kqdQ sinq
- R2
42- l Q/pR
- dQ lds
- s Rq
- dQ l Rdq
- dFy kq lR sinq dq
- R2
43- Fy kq l - cosq p
- R 0
- Fy 2kq l
- R
44Electric Field
- Contact forces
- Friction
- Pushes and pulls
- Forces at a distance
- Gravity
- Electromagnetism
- Field Invisible lines that extend from a body
45A positive test charge would be repelled by the
field
46A positive test charge would be attracted by the
field
-
47 48 49- E in terms of a test charge
- E F
- q
- Vector quantity
- Force that the test charge q would feel. The
smaller the charge, the larger the Force
50- E in terms of a point charge
- E kQ
- r2
- Vector quantity
- Point charge is the source charge producing the
electric field - k 1/ 4pe0
- e0 8.85 X 10-12 C2/Nm2 (permittivity constant)
51Electric Field Example 1
- Find the electric force on a proton placed in an
electric field of 2.0 X 104 N/C - E F
- q
- F qE
- F (1.602 X 10-19 C)(2.0 X 104 N/C)
- F 3.2 X 10-15N
52Electric Field Example 2
- Calculate the magnitude and direction of an
electric field at a point 30 cm from a source
charge of Q -3.0 X 10-6 C. - E kQ
- r2
- E (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(3.0 X 10-6 C)
- (0.30 m)2
- E 3.05 X 105 N/C towards the charge
53- What electric field is required for a copier to
carry toner particles of mass 9.0 X 10-16 kg.
Each particle carries 20 electrons to provide the
test charge. - Assume the copier must overcome twice the weight
of each particle.
54- E F
- q
- F 2mg (twice the weight)
- E 2mg (2)(9.0 X 10-16 kg)(9.8m/s2)
- q (20)(1.602X10-19C)
- E 5500 N/C
55Electric Field Example 3
- Two point charges are separated by a distance of
10.0 cm. What is the magnitude and direction of
the electric field at point P, 2.0 cm from the
negative charge?
2 cm
8 cm
P
-
Q1 -25 mC
Q2 50 mC
56E2
E1
2 cm
8 cm
P
-
Q1 -25 mC
Q2 50 mC
57- E E1 E2 (both point to the left)
- E kQ
- r2
- E1 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(25 X 10-6 C) (0.020
m)2 - E1 5.625 X 108 N/C
- E2 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(50 X 10-6 C) (0.080
m)2 - E2 7.031 X 107 N/C
- E E1 E2 6.3 X 108 N/C
58Electric Field Example 3a
- What acceleration would an electron feel if it
were placed at point P? Would it move to the
right or the left? An electron has a mass of 9.1
X 10-31 kg.
E2
E1
2 cm
8 cm
P
-
Q1 -25 mC
Q2 50 mC
59- E F
- q
- F ma
- E ma
- q
- a Eq/m
- a (6.3 X 108 N/C)(1.602 X 10-19 C)
- (9.1 X 10-31 kg)
- a 1.1 X 1020 m/s2
60Electric Field Example 4
- Charge Q1 7.00 mC is placed at the origin.
Charge Q2 -5.00 mC is placed 0.300 m to the
right. Calculate the electric field at point P,
0.400 m above the origin.
P
0.400 m
0.300 m
-
Q1 7.00 mC
Q2 -5.00 mC
61P
0.400 m
c 0.500 m
q
0.300 m
-
Q1 7.00 mC
Q2 -5.00 mC
c2 a2 b2 c2 (0.400 m)2 (0.300 m)2 c
0.500 m tan q opp/adj 0.400/0.300 q 53.1o
62- E kQ
- r2
- E1 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(7.00 X 10-6 C) (0.400
m)2 - E1 3.94 X 105 N/C
- E2 (9.0 X 109 N-m2/C2)(5.00 X 10-6 C) (0.500
m)2 - E2 1.80 X 105 N/C
63E1
E2x
P
E2
E2y
q
-
E2x E2cosq (1.80 X 105 N/C)(cos 53.1o) E2x
1.08 X 105 N/C (to the right) E2y E2sinq
(1.80 X 105 N/C)(sin 53.1o) E2y -1.44 X 105 N/C
(down)
64- Ex E2x
- Ex 1.08 X 105 N/C (to the right)
- Ey E1 E2y
- Ey 3.94 X 105 N/C -1.44 X 105 N/C
- Ey 2.49 X 105 N/C
- ER2 (1.08 X 105 N/C )2 (2.49 X 105 N/C)2
- ER 2.72 X 105 N/C
- tan f Ey/Ex 2.49 X 105/ 1.08 X 105
- f 66.6o
f
P
65Electric Field Example 5
- Calculate the electric field at point A, as shown
in the diagram
A
30 cm
52 cm
-
Q1 50.0 mC
Q2 -50.0 mC
66- Ans E 4.5 X 106 N/C at an angle of 76o
67Electric Field Example 6
- Calculate the electric field at point B, as shown
in the diagram.
B
30 cm
26 cm
26 cm
-
Q1 50.0 mC
Q2 -50.0 mC
68- Ans E 3.6 X 106 N/C along the x direction