Title: Unit 7, Chapter 21
1Unit 7, Chapter 21
CPO Science Foundations of Physics
2Unit 7 Electricity and Magnetism
Chapter 21 Electric Charges and Forces
- 21.1 Electric Charge
- 21.2 Coulombs Law
- 21.3 Capacitors
3Chapter 21 Objectives
- Describe and calculate the forces between like
and unlike electric charges. - Identify the parts of the atom that carry
electric charge. - Apply the concept of an electric field to
describe how charges exert force on other
charges. - Sketch the electric field around a positive or
negative point charge. - Describe how a conductor shields electric fields
from its interior. - Describe the voltage and current in a circuit
with a battery, switch, resistor, and capacitor. - Calculate the charge stored in a capacitor.
4Chapter 21 Vocabulary Terms
- charge
- electrically neutral
- static electricity
- positive charge
- negative charge
- electric forces
- charge by friction
- electroscope
- protons
- neutrons
- electrons
- gravitational field
- charged
- induction
- Coulombs law
- capacitor
- parallel plate capacitor
- microfarad
- coulomb
- electric field
- capacitance
- charge
- polarization
- shielding test
- charge
- farad
- field inverse
- square law
- discharged field
- lines
521.1 Electric Charge
- Key Question
- How do electric charges interact?
Students read Section 21.1 AFTER Investigation
21.1
621.1 Electric Charge
- All ordinary matter contains both positive and
negative charge. - You do not usually notice the charge because most
matter contains the exact same number of positive
and negative charges. - An object is electrically neutral when it has
equal amounts of both types of charge.
721.1 Electric Charge
- Objects can lose or gain electric charges.
- The net charge is also sometimes called excess
charge because a charged object has an excess of
either positive or negative charges. - A tiny imbalance in either positive or negative
charge on an object is the cause of static
electricity.
821.1 Electric Charge
- Electric charge is a property of tiny particles
in atoms. - The unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C).
- A quantity of charge should always be identified
with a positive or a negative sign.
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1021.1 Electric forces
- Electric forces are created between all electric
charges. - Because there are two kinds of charge (positive
and negative) the electrical force between
charges can attract or repel.
1121.1 Electric forces
- The forces between the two kinds of charge can be
observed with an electroscope.
1221.1 Electric forces
- Charge can be transferred by conduction.
1321.1 Electric current
- The direction of current was historically defined
as the direction that positive charges move. - Both positive and negative charges can carry
current.
- In conductive liquids (salt water) both positive
and negative charges carry current. - In solid metal conductors, only the electrons can
move, so current is carried by the flow of
negative electrons.
1421.1 Electric current
- Current is the movement of electric charge
through a substance.
Charge that flows (coulombs)
Current (amps)
Time (sec)
1521.1 Calculate current
- Two coulombs of charge pass through a wire in
five seconds. - Calculate the current in the wire.
1621.1 Conductors and insulators
- All materials contain electrons.
- The electrons are what carry the current in a
conductor. - The electrons in insulators are not free to
movethey are tightly bound inside atoms.
1721.1 Conductors and insulators
- A semiconductor has a few free electrons and
atoms with bound electrons that act as insulators.
1821.1 Conductors and insulators
- When two neutral objects are rubbed together,
charge is transferred from one to the other and
the objects become oppositely charged. - This is called charging by friction.
- Objects charged by this method will attract each
other.
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2021.2 Coulomb's Law
- Coulombs law relates the force between two
single charges separated by a distance.
Constant 9 x109 N.m2/C2
Force (N)
Charges (C)
Distance (m)
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2221.2 Coulomb's Law
- The force between two charges gets stronger as
the charges move closer together. - The force also gets stronger if the amount of
charge becomes larger.
2321.2 Coulomb's Law
- The force between two charges is directed along
the line connecting their centers. - Electric forces always occur in pairs according
to Newtons third law, like all forces.
2421.1 Coulomb's Law
- The force between charges is directly
proportional to the magnitude, or amount, of each
charge. - Doubling one charge doubles the force.
- Doubling both charges quadruples the force.
2521.1 Coulomb's Law
- The force between charges is inversely
proportional to the square of the distance
between them. - Doubling the distance reduces the force by a
factor of 22 (4), decreasing the force to
one-fourth its original value (1/4). - This relationship is called an inverse square law
because force and distance follow an inverse
square relationship.
2621.2 Calculating force
- Two balls are each given a static electric charge
of one ten-thousandth (0.0001) of a coulomb. - Calculate the force between the charges when they
are separated by one-tenth (0.1) of a meter. - Compare the force with the weight of an average
70 kg person.
2721.2 Fields and forces
- The concept of a field is used to describe any
quantity that has a value for all points in
space. - You can think of the field as the way forces are
transmitted between objects. - Charge creates an electric field that creates
forces on other charges.
2821.2 Fields and forces
- Mass creates a gravitational field that exerts
forces on other masses.
2921.2 Fields and forces
- Gravitational forces are far weaker than electric
forces.
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3121.2 Drawing the electric field
3221.2 Electric fields and electric force
- On the Earths surface, the gravitational field
creates 9.8 N of force on each kilogram of mass. - With gravity, the strength of the field is in
newtons per kilogram (N/kg) because the field
describes the amount of force per kilogram of
mass.
3321.2 Electric fields and electric force
- With the electric field, the strength is in
newtons per coulomb (N/C). - The electric field describes the amount of force
per coulomb of charge.
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3521.2 Accelerators
- An electric field can be produced by maintaining
a voltage difference across any insulating space,
such as air or a vacuum. - Electric fields are used to create beams of
high-speed electrons by accelerating them. - Electron beams are used in x-ray machines,
televisions, computer displays, and many other
technologies.
3621.2 Electric shielding
- Electric fields are created all around us by
electric appliances, lightning, and even static
electricity. - These stray electric fields can interfere with
the operation of computers and other sensitive
electronics. - Many electrical devices and wires that connect
them are enclosed in conducting metal shells to
take advantage of the shielding effect.
3721.2 Coulombs Law
- Key Question
- How strong are electrical forces?
Students read Section 21.2 BEFORE Investigation
21.2
3821.3 Capacitors
- A capacitor is a storage device for electric
charge.
- Capacitors can be connected in series or parallel
in circuits, just like resistors.
3921.3 Capacitors
- A capacitor can be charged by connecting it to a
battery or any other source of current. - A capacitor can be discharged by connecting it to
any closed circuit that allows current to flow.
4021.3 Capacitors
- The current flowing into or out of a particular
capacitor depends on four things - The amount of charge already in the capacitor.
- The voltage applied to the capacitor by the
circuit. - Any circuit resistance that limits the current
flowing in the circuit. - The capacitance of the capacitor.
4121.3 How a capacitor works inside
- The simplest type of capacitor is called a
parallel plate capacitor. - It is made of two conductive metal plates that
are close together, with an insulating plate in
between to keep the charges from coming together. - Wires conduct charges coming in and out of the
capacitor.
4221.3 How a capacitor works inside
- The amount of charge a capacitor can store
depends on several factors - The voltage applied to the capacitor.
- The insulating ability of the material between
the positive and negative plates. - The area of the two plates (larger areas can hold
more charge). - The separation distance between the plates.
4321.3 Capacitance
- The ability of a capacitor to store charge is
called capacitance (C).
Capacitance (coulombs/volt)
Charge (C)
q C V
Voltage (volts)
Cameras use capacitors to supply quick bursts of
energy to flash bulbs.
4421.3 Capacitance
- Capacitance is measured in farads (F).
- A one-farad capacitor can store one coulomb of
charge when the voltage across its plates is one
volt.
- One farad is a large amount of capacitance, so
the microfarad (µF) is frequently used in place
of the farad.
4521.3 Calculate capacitance
- A capacitor holds 0.02 coulombs of charge when
fully charged by a 12-volt battery. - Calculate its capacitance and the voltage that
would be required for it to hold one coulomb of
charge.
4621.3 Capacitors
- Key Question
- How does a capacitor work?
Students read Section 21.3 BEFORE Investigation
21.3
47Application How a Television Works