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Chapter 18 Electric Forces and Electric Fields The Origin of Electricity • The electrical nature of matter is inherent in atomic structure. An atom consists of small, relatively massive nucleus particles called protons and neutrons. • 2 Kinds of Electric Charge: • 1. Positive – proton • 2. Negative - electron A proton has a mass of 1.673 x 10-27 kg • Neutron has 1.675 x 10-27 kg. • Surrounding the nucleus is a diffuse cloud of orbiting particles called electrons. • An electron has a mass of 9.11 x 10-31kg. • The magnitude of the charge on the proton is exactly equal the magnitude of the charge on the electron; • The proton carries a charge + e, and the electron carries a charge of – e. • SI unit: coulomb (C ) • e = 1.60 x 10 -19C • The symbol e represents only the magnitude of the charge on a proton or an electron and does not include the algebraic sign that indicates whether the charge is + or -. When an atom or any object carrying no net charge, the • object is said to be electrically neutral. The neutrons in the nucleus are electrically neutral particles (has no electric charge). • The charge on an electron or a proton is the smallest amount of free charge that has been discovered. Charges of larger magnitude are built up on an object by adding or removing electrons. Thus, any charge of magnitude q is an integer multiple of e, that is, q = Ne, where N is an integer. Because any electric charge q occurs in integer multiples of • elementary, indivisible charges of magnitude e, electric charge is said to be quantized. • Example: How many electrons are there in one coulomb of negative charge? • N = q/e = 1/1.6 ×10-19 = 6.26 × 10+18 electrons • Law of Conservation of Electric Charge • during any process, the net electric charge of an isolated system remains constant (is conserved). • It is easy to demonstrate that 2 electrically charged objects exert a force on one another. • Like charges, repel and unlike charges attract each other. Note: the force has magnitude and direction Direction of E out of the +ve charge Direction of E toward the –ve charge Conductors and Insulators • Substances that readily conduct electric charge are called electrical conductor. • Metals such as copper, aluminum, silver, and gold are excellent electrical conductors and therefore are used in electrical wiring. • Materials that conduct electrical charge poorly are known as electrical insulators. Examples of electrical insulators are rubber, many plastics and wood. Example: A Test Charge • The positive test charge (pls see p 547) is qo = + 3.0 x 10-8 C and experiences a force F 6.0 x 10-8 N in the direction shown in the drawing. • A) Find the force per coulomb that the test charge experiences • B) Using the result in (a), predict the force that a charge of + 12 x 10-8 C would experience if it replaced qo.