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Chapter 23 Electric Fields Intro • The electromagnetic force between particles is one of the four fundamental forces of nature. • We will begin by discussing electric charges and the forces associated. • We will then look at the electric field produced by a distribution of charges. • Finally we will examine the motion of a charged particle in an electric field. 23.1 Properties of Electric Charges • An object is Electrically Charged if it has an imbalance between the two fundamental types of charge. • Positive and Negative Charges, names given by Benjamin Franklin are how we identify the charge of a proton and electron respectively. • The behavior of charged objects is commonly observed. 23.1 • Opposite Charges exhibit attractive forces. 23.1 • Similar Charges exhibit repellant forces. 23.1 • Electric Charge is always conserved. – When one object is rubbed against another, charge is not created. – The charged state occurs due to a transfer of charge from one object to another. – Whatever one object gains, the other object loses (for isolated systems). – Glass/Silk and Rubber/Fur 23.1 23.1 • Charge is quantized – The fundamental “charge packet” is e. – All charges represent an integer multiple of e. q Ne – The charges of a proton and electron are +e and -e respectively. Quick Quizzes p 709 23.2 Charging by Induction • Material Classification – Conductor- material that has free electrons, not bound to atoms, able to move freely through the material • Typically metals- copper, silver, aluminum • Metallic bonding leaves free electrons – Insulator- material in which all electrons are bound to atoms, and cannot freely move. • Glass, rubber, wood • Charges remain in a given area, are not free to move 23.2 – Semiconductors- electrical properties somewhere between conductors and insulators. • Silicon, Germanium • The properties can be modified by the addition of controlled amounts of certain atoms to pure semiconductors. • The process is called “doping” 23.2 • Stripping electrons from one material to another is not the only way to produce a charge. • Induction- one process for charging a conductor. • Consider a neutral conducting sphere. 23.2 • A charged rod is brought near the sphere. • The sphere is attached to ground. The excess electrons flow to ground. 23.2 • Ground- any electron reservoir (a source that can give/receive electrons freely without significant change to its overall electrical characteristics) • Ex: Earth, Car Frame 23.2 • The ground wire is removed • The charged rod is removed leaving the conducting sphere with more positive charge than negative. 23.2 • Charges can be induced in insulators even with the lack of free electrons. • The molecules can be realigned in the presence of an electric charge, producing a layer of charge on the surface of the insulator. 23.2 • Quick Quiz p. 711 23.3 Coulomb’s Law • Charles Coulomb was able to measure the electric force between charged objects using his torsion balance (very similar in idea to the Cavendish Experiment) 23.3 • He was able to verify the following conclusions about the electric force. – Follows the inverse square law. – Proportional the product of the charges q1 and q2 – The force is attractive if charges are opposite sign, repulsive if they have the same sign. – The electric force is conservative. 23.3 • Coulomb’s Law determines the electric force between two point charges. q1q2 Fe ke 2 r • Where ke is the Coulomb constant, q1 and q2 are the particle charges, r is the distance between them 23.3 • The SI unit for charge, q, is the Coulomb (C) – 1 C ≈ The charge of 6.24 x 1018 Electrons (e) – 1 e = 1.602 x 10-19 C • The coulomb constant ke 8.9875 x10 N m / C 9 2 2 1 4o • εo is called the Vacuum Permittivity o 8.8542 x10 12 C 2 / N m 2 23.3 • Remember, Force is a vector quantity. • The force of q1 on q2 is equal and opposite of q2 on q1 • Quick Quizzes p 712-13 • Examples 23.1-23.4 23.4 Electric Field • The electric force is a field force – The force can act through empty space, (like gravity) no contact is required. • An electric Field exists in the region surrounding a charged object. – This is the source charge. • When a second charge, is brought into the field, an electric force acts on it – This is the test charge. 23.4 • The electric field is defined as the Electric Force on the test charge per unit of charge. (N/C) – Just like gravitational field (the gravitational force per unit of mass N/kg or m/s2) Fe E qo g Fg m 23.4 • The direction of the Electric Field vector is determined by which direction the force would act on a Positive test charge. – Points away from a positive source charge. – Points towards a negative source charge. • The magnitude of the E-Field around any point source charge can be found by. qqo k 2 Fe E r qo qo kq E 2 r 23.4 • Example 23.5, 23.6 23.5 Electric field from a Continuous Charge Distribution • How to we determine the electric field caused by an object other than a point charge. • We will look at symmetrical objects on which the charge is evenly distributed. • We will “add up” the E-field created by each “tiny piece” of the charged object. • We will integrate over the entire charge distribution. 23.5 • This is a vector operation and direction will need to be accounted for appropriately. dq E k e 2 rˆ r • We will be looking at the charges evenly distributed on a line, on a surface, or throughout a volume. • Charge density will become a convenient factor. 23.5 • Charge Density – Volumetric- charge per unit volume (C/m3) Q V – Surface- charge per unit area (C/m2) Q A – Linear- charge per unit length (C/m) Q 23.5 • When looking at the amount of charge on a small piece of the object for integration… – Volume – Surface – Line dq = ρdV dq = σdA dq = λdl 23.5 • See Board Diagrams • Examples 23.7-23.9 23.6 Electric Field Lines • To Show the electric field pictorially, electric field line diagrams can be drawn. • The Electric Field vector E is tangent to the field line at any point. • The number of field lines through a surface per unit area is proportional to the magnitude of the electric field in that region. 23.6 • On a positive point charge– The electric field lines radiate outward in all directions – In 3D, the distribution is spherical. – A positive test charge would be repelled from the source charge. 23.6 • On a negative point charge– The field lines radiate inward in all directions. – A positive test charge would be attracted to the source charge. 23.6 • For an electric Dipole (equal/opposite charges) – The number of field lines leaving the positive charge equals the number of field lines terminating on the negative charge. 23.6 • Equal and Like Charges – The same number of charges leave both particles. – At a great distance the field approximates to that of a single 2q charge. 23.6 • Opposite/Unequal Charges – The number of lines leaving/terminating each charge is proportional to their relative charges (in this case, 2 to 1) – At a great distance the E field would approximate to that of a single charge q. 23.6 • Drawing Electric Field Lines – The lines must begin on a positive charge and terminate on a negative charge. • With a charge imbalance, some lines will begin/end infinitely far away. – The number of lines beginning/terminating is proportional to the relative charges. – The fields lines can not cross. • Quick Quizzes p 725 23.7 The Motion of Charged Particles in an Electric Field • A charged particle in an electric field experiences an Electric force. • If this is the only force acting, Fe is the net force. • The charged particle will accelerate according to Newton’s 2nd Law Fe qE ma 23.7 • If E is uniform, then a is a constant value. – If the charge is positive, the acceleration vector points with the E-field. – If the charge is negative, the acceleration vector points against the E-field. • Since acceleration is constant, kinematics equations can be use. • Example 23.10 p 726 23.7 • Charged Projectiles– The charged particle can follow a 2D projectile path if it has velocity perpendicular to the E-field. – Example 23.11 pg 727 23.7 • The Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) – Used for display of electronic information • Oscilloscopes, Radar systems, TV/Computer Monitors