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Download Ch 17 Introduction to electricity
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CH 17 INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRICITY https://youtu.be/EJeAuQ7pkpc I. ELECTRICAL CHARGE AND STATIC ELECTRICITY A. ELECTRIC CHARGE 1. All matter is composed of atoms 2. Atoms have 1protons, 2electrons, & 3neutrons • Protons (+) • Electrons (-) • Neutrons (neutral or no charge) 3. Charged objects exert a force • Push or pull 4. Law of electrical charges= like charges repel (push away) & opposite charges attract 5. Protons (+) and electrons (-) attract each other or the atom would not stay together 6. Electrical force= force of attraction or repulsion on a charged particle that is die to an electric field • Depends on: 1 Amount of charge on each object (greater the charge= greater the force) 2 Distance between the charges (closer together= greater the force ) 7. Electrical field= the space around a charged object in which an electric force is exerted on another charged object • Other object will either be attracted or repelled STOP AND THINK…… • What are 2 types of charged particles in an atom? • Postive (+) Protons • Negative (-) Electrons B. CHARGE IT! 1. An object becomes POSITIVELY charged when it LOSES electrons • Losing negatives makes it more positive 2. An object becomes NEGATIVELY charged when it GAINS electrons • Gaining negatives makes it more negative 3. Three ways to charge an object: a. Friction= electrons are “wiped” from one object to another- rubbing a balloon on your head) b. Contact (Conduction)= electrons move from one object to another by touch https://youtu.be/T0J5q43MSw8 c. Induction= charges in an uncharged metal object are rearranged without direct contact with a charged object C. CONSERVATION OF CHARGES 1. Charges are not created or destroyed when you charge something by any of the 3 methods 2. The numbers of electrons & protons stay the same 3. Electrons are simply transferred from one object to the next D. DETECTING CHARGES 1. Electroscope= device that detects charges 2. Metal strips will hang straight when it is not charged 3. If a charged object touches the electroscope the strips will repel (move apart) 4. Does NOT show if the charged object is positive or negative LAB: CREATING AN ELECTROSCOPE TO DETECT CHARGES • https://youtu.be/-JsVZwc1dOo E. STATIC ELECTRICITY 1. “Static“ = not moving • Charges of the static electricity do not move away from the object they are in 2. Static electricity = the electric charge at rest on an object 3. Examples: static cling & charged balloons • Friction transfers the charge to the clothes or balloon and since the objects are insulators the charge stays after the friction ceases 3. Electric Discharge: the loss of electricity as charges move off an object https://youtu.be/yc2-363MIQs a. When you touch a door knob after shuffling your feet b. Lightening is caused by the large charge difference & rapid electrical discharge 4. Lightening rods on top of buildings are grounded so the charge goes into the Earth be absorbed • Lightening strike the highest point F. MOVING CHARGES 1. Electrical conductors= materials in which charges can move easily • Most metals 2. Electrical insulators= materials in which charges cannot move through easily • Electrons are held very tightly in these materials • Plastic, rubber, glass, wood & air 3. Semiconductors: special class of materials that conduct electric charge better than electrical insulators, but not as good as electrical conductors • Silicon used in computer chips G. ELECTRIC CURRENT 1. Electric current = rate at which charges pass a given point a. Higher the current the greater the number of charges that pass the point each second b. Unit of measurement for electric current is expressed in amperes (amps) c. Amps symbol A d. Symbol for current in formulas = I 2. Charges in the current are transferred from electron to electron 3. The electric field that causes the electrons in the wire to move • Electrons are slow but since the current turns them all on at once the work simultaneously 4. Two kinds of electric current: https://youtu.be/xyQfrzBfnDU a. DC direct current= charges always flow in the same direction • Used in batteries b. AC alternating current= charges shift from flowing in one direction to flowing in the reverse direction • Electric in outlets • https://youtu.be/fNpIq0gOTAk Edison vs Tesla