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Download Physics Chapter 17 Notes Electric forces and fields
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Physics Chapter 17 Notes: Electric forces and fields Dryness is important for most electrical circuits because excessive moisture can provide a pathway for charge to leak off a charged object. One of the most incredible creations is the human 1 body, which is electrical. In the human body, electrical structures operate freely in a moist environment. Usually, this spells disaster. We know that like charges repel and opposite charges attract. 2 Typically, we describe movements of electrons when we track charges, simply because protons and neutrons are trapped in nuclei and are not as free to move about. In the early 1900’s, it was Millikan that quantified or measured the electron with an oil-drop experiment. 3 An electron has a charge (C) of -19 q = –1.60 x 10 C and a -31 mass in kg of 9.109 x 10 kg. A proton has a charge of -19 q = +1.60 x 10 C and a -27 mass of 1.673 x 10 kg. 4 A neutron has a charge of 0 C and a mass of -27 1.675 x 10 kg. Materials in which electric charges move freely, such as copper and aluminum are called conductors. Materials in which electric charges do not move freely, such as glass, rubber, silk 5 and plastic are called insulators. When a balloon is rubbed against something, a static charge results. This process of transferring charge directly from one object to another is called charging by contact. 6 When a conductor is connected to the earth by means of a conducting wire or copper pipe, the conductor is said to be grounded. The earth can be considered to be an infinite reservoir for electrons because it can accept or supply an unlimited number of electrons. 7 Induction is the process of charging a conductor by bringing it near another charged object and grounding the conductor. Coulomb’s Law is used to calculate how small or large and electric force can be. 8 Felectric=kC(q1q2) 2 r The value of the Coulomb constant is: 8.99 x 10 N m 2 C The Coulomb force is the second example we have studied of a force that is exerted by one object on another even though there 8 2 9 is no physical contact between the two objects (field force). The other example of field force is gravitational attraction. Both forces are inversely proportional to the square of the distance of separation. 10 Because electrical field strength is a ratio of force to charge, the SI units of E are Newtons per Coulomb (N/C). The formula for determining electric field strength from a point charge is: E = kC q 2 r 11 Electric field lines are lines that represent both the magnitude and direction of the electric field. When one end of a conductor is sharper than the other, excess charge tends to accumulate at the sharper end, resulting in a larger charge per unit area and therefore a larger 12 repulsive electric force between charges at this end. In a Van de Graaf generator, charge is transferred to the dome by a rotating belt that is kept in motion by a pulley. This is the device that makes your hair stand on end when you touch it. 13