Title: The Big Picture
1The Big Picture
- Whats the world made of what holds it together?
- The Standard Model
- All the known matter particles are composites of
quarks and leptons, and they interact by
exchanging force carrier particles - Whats the world made of
- 6 quarks 6 anti-quarks
- protons and neutrons are made up of quarks
- 6 leptons 6 anti-leptons
- the electron is the most common lepton
- What holds it together
- force carrier particles
- like photons
2The Big Picture Forces
- Common Forces
- Gravity
- Fma
- Centripetal force
- Friction
- Charged particles
- Magnetism
- Molecular attraction
- Nuclear Weak
- Nuclear Strong
3How can I pick up small pieces of paper with a
comb?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- No problem, a comb will always pick up paper
pieces - Are you kidding, a comb cannot pick up paper
pieces - Run it through your hair first
- Close one eye, stand on your left leg, and say
abracadabra when you do it
Your Observation
4A conductive sphere has a net charge of zero and
is suspended by an electrically insulating
thread. A charged rod is brought in close to the
sphere without touching it.What happens to the
sphere?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- It is attracted to the rod
- It is repelled by the rod
- It may be attracted or repelled, depending on
the charge on the rod (/-) - It is unaffected by the rod
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Your Observation
5A conductive sphere has a net charge of zero and
is suspended by an electrically insulating
thread. A charged rod is brought in close to the
sphere without touching it.The sphere is
attracted to the rod. Why?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- The sphere gets some electrons from the rod
- Negative and neutral are opposite charges
andopposite charges attract - The attraction is somehow magnetic
- None of the above
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Your Observation
6A conductive sphere has a net charge of zero and
is suspended by an electrically insulating
thread. A charged rod is brought in close to the
sphere and touches the sphere.What happens to
the sphere?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- It is attracted to the rod
- It is repelled by the rod
- It may be attracted or repelled, depending on
the charge on the rod (/-) - It is unaffected by the rod
Your Observation
7What happens when two identically charged objects
are brought close together?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- They repel
- They attract
- Nothing, there is no force
Your Observation
8What happens when two differently charged objects
are brought close together?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- They repel
- They attract
- Nothing, there is no force
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Your Observation
9Electric Forces
Draw the force vectors (length proportional to
magnitude) on each of these charged pith balls.
5 Charge
1 Charge
10Electrostatics
- Summary
- What causes some objects to become charged?
- Rubbing
- How can we test if an object is charged?
- It attracts a small neutral object
- Can charge be transferred from one object to
another? - Yes
- How is the charge transferred?
- By contact
- How many different kinds of charge are there?
- At least two kinds
- What can we say about their forces?
- Opposite charges attract
- Like charges repel
11How can we determine if an object is positively
charged?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- See if it attracts a neural object
- See if it is attracted to a negatively charged
object - Either of the above is sufficient
- None of the above are sufficient
Your Observation
12Electrostatics
Metal
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Charged Rod
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Connecting Rod
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13Consider two objects A and B. Object A has a net
charge, object B is uncharged. Based on this
information, can you tell whether or not either
object is a conductor or an insulator?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- Object A is a conductor and object B is an
insulator - Object A is a insulator and object B is an
conductor - Both objects are conductors
- Both objects are insulators
- Object A is a conductor and we cant tell what
object B is - Cant tell what object A is and object B is an
insulator - Cant tell what either object is
14What happens when a neutral pith ball is brought
close to one end of a metal rod and a charged rod
is brought close to the other?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- It is attracted to the rod
- It is repelled by the rod
- Nothing, it will feel no force
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Metal Rod
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Unchargedpith ball
Charged Rod
Your Observation
15Compared to the gravitational force, electric
forces are
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- Much weaker than gravitational forces
- About the same as gravitational forces
- Much stronger than gravitational forces
- We cannot compare them
Your Observation
16Two neutral, conductive spheres are in contact
with one another. A charged rod is brought close
to sphere A. The spheres are separated. What is
the charge on each sphere?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- Both remain neutral
- Both are positive
- Both are negative
- A is positive while B is negative
- A is negative while B is positive
- Cant tell
Metal
Metal
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B
A
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Your Observation
Charged Rod
17Your instructor rubs a balloon against his hair.
Which statements are correct?
Electrostatics
Your Prediction
- The balloon becomes electrically charged
- Your instructors hair becomes electrically
charged - The balloon will be attracted to an electrically
insulating wall - The balloon will be attracted to an electrically
conducting wall - Your instructors hair will stand up and look
funny (if he has hair) - All of the above
Your Observation
18Electrostatics
Electroscope
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Charged Rod
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19A lightning rod works to protect buildings from
lightning strikes by
Lightning Rod
Your Prediction
- Creating a high electric field that attracts the
lightning away from the building to the rod - Creating a high electric field that enables
charges to bleed off eliminating the need for a
lightning strike - Reducing the electric field near the rod, thus
preventing a lightning strike - We know they work but cannot explain how
- Lightning rods dont really do anything to
protect buildings
Your Observation