Title: Chapter 23 Electric Charge and Electric Fields
1Chapter 23 Electric Charge and Electric Fields
- What is a field?
- Why have them?
- What causes fields?
2Electric Charge
- Types
- Positive
- Glass rubbed with silk
- Missing electrons
- Negative
- Rubber/Plastic rubbed with fur
- Extra electrons
- Arbitrary choice
- convention attributed to ?
- Units amount of charge is measured in
Coulombs - Empirical Observations
- Like charges repel
- Unlike charges attract
3(No Transcript)
4Charge in the Atom
- Protons ()
- Electrons (-)
- Ions
- Polar Molecules
5Charge Properties
- Conservation
- Charge is not created or destroyed, only
transferred. - The net amount of electric charge produced in any
process is zero. - Quantization
- The smallest unit of charge is that on an
electron or proton. (e 1.6 x 10-19 C) - It is impossible to have less charge than this
- It is possible to have integer multiples of this
charge
6Conductors and Insulators
- Conductor transfers charge on contact
- Insulator does not transfer charge on contact
- Semiconductor might transfer charge on contact
7Charge Transfer Processes
- Conduction
- Polarization
- Induction
8The Electroscope
9Coulombs Law
- Empirical Observations
- Formal Statement
Direction of the force is along the line joining
the two charges
10Active Figure 23.7
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
11Coulombs Law Example
- What is the magnitude of the electric force of
attraction between an iron nucleus (q26e) and
its innermost electron if the distance between
them is 1.5 x 10-12 m
12Hydrogen Atom Example
- The electrical force between the electron and
proton is found from Coulombs law - Fe keq1q2 / r2 8.2 x 108 N
- This can be compared to the gravitational force
between the electron and the proton - Fg Gmemp / r2 3.6 x 10-47 N
13Subscript Convention
q1
q2
14More Coulombs Law
q1
q2
Coulombs constant
permittivity of free space
Charge polarity Same sign Force is
right Opposite sign Force is Left
Electrostatics --- Charges must be at rest!
15Superposition of Forces
Q1
Q2
Q0
Q3
16Coulombs Law Example
- Q 6.0 mC
- L 0.10 m
- What is the magnitude and direction of the net
force on one of the charges?
17Zero Resultant Force, Example
- Where is the resultant force equal to zero?
- The magnitudes of the individual forces will be
equal - Directions will be opposite
- Will result in a quadratic
- Choose the root that gives the forces in opposite
directions
18Electrical Force with Other Forces, Example
- The spheres are in equilibrium
- Since they are separated, they exert a repulsive
force on each other - Charges are like charges
- Proceed as usual with equilibrium problems,
noting one force is an electrical force
19Electrical Force with Other Forces, Example cont.
- The free body diagram includes the components of
the tension, the electrical force, and the weight - Solve for q
- You cannot determine the sign of q, only that
they both have same sign
20The Electric Field
- Charge particles create forces on each other
without ever coming into contact. - action at a distance
- A charge creates in space the ability to exert a
force on a second very small charge. This
ability exists even if the second charge is not
present. - We call this ability to exert a force at a
distance a field - In general, a field is defined
- The Electric Field is then
Why in the limit?
21Electric Field near a Point Charge
Electric Field Vectors
Electric Field Lines
22Active Figure 23.13
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
23Rules for Drawing Field Lines
- The electric field, , is tangent to the field
lines. - The number of lines leaving/entering a charge is
proportional to the charge. - The number of lines passing through a unit area
normal to the lines is proportional to the
strength of the field in that region. - Field lines must begin on positive charges (or
from infinity) and end on negative charges (or at
infinity). The test charge is positive by
convention. - No two field lines can cross.
24Electric Field Lines, General
- The density of lines through surface A is greater
than through surface B - The magnitude of the electric field is greater on
surface A than B - The lines at different locations point in
different directions - This indicates the field is non-uniform
25Example Field Lines
Line Charge
Dipole
For a continuous linear charge distribution,
Linear Charge Density
26Active Figure 23.24
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
27More Field Lines
Surface Charge Density
Volume Charge Density
28Superposition of Fields
q1
q2
0
q3
29Superposition Example
- Find the electric field due to q1, E1
- Find the electric field due to q2, E2
- E E1 E2
- Remember, the fields add as vectors
- The direction of the individual fields is the
direction of the force on a positive test charge
30Electric Field of a Dipole (ex. 23.6)
y
-q
q
31P23.19
- Three point charges are arranged as shown in
Figure P23.19. - Find the vector electric field that the 6.00-nC
and 3.00-nC charges together create at the
origin. - (b) Find the vector force on the 5.00-nC charge.
Figure P23.19
32P23.52
- Three point charges are aligned along the x axis
as shown in Figure P23.52. Find the electric
field at - the position (2.00, 0) and
- the position (0, 2.00).
Figure P23.52
33 in x direction.
34P23.19
(a)
(b)
35Continuous Charge Distributions
Single piece of a charge distribution
Single charge
Continuous charge distribution
Discrete charges
36Finding dq
Cartesian
Polar
Line charge
Surface charge
Volume charge
37Example Infinitely Long Line of Charge
y-components cancel by symmetry
38Example Charged Ring (ex 23.8)
y-components cancel by symmetry
39Check a Limiting Case
When
The charged ring must look like a point source.
40Uniformly Charged Disk (ex. 23.9)
41Binomial Expansion Theorem
Quadratic terms and higher are small
42Two Important Limiting Cases
Large Charged Plate
43Parallel Plate Capacitor
Q
44Motion of Charged Particles in a Uniform Electric
Field
45Example
- A proton accelerates from rest in a uniform
electric field of 500 N/C. At some time later,
its speed is 2.50 x 106 m/s. - Find the acceleration of the proton.
- How long does it take for the proton to reach
this speed? - How far has it moved in this time?
- What is the kinetic energy?
46Motion of Charged Particles in a Uniform Electric
Field
Q
-e
-Q
47Active Figure 23.26
(SLIDESHOW MODE ONLY)
48Motion of Charged Particles in a Uniform Electric
Field
Phosphor Screen
This device is known as a cathode ray tube (CRT)
49Summary
Point Charges
Coulombs Law
Electric Field
These can be used to find the fields in the
vicinity of continuous charge distributions
Line of Charge
Dipole
Charged Plate