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Physics 1502: Lecture 5 Today’s Agenda • Announcements: – Lectures posted on: www.phys.uconn.edu/~rcote/ – HW assignments, solutions etc. • Homework #2: – On Masterphysics today: due next Friday – Go to masteringphysics.com and register – Course ID: MPCOTE33308 • Labs: Begin next week Today’s Topic : • Chapter 22: Electric potential – Definition – How to compute it: E from V » Example: dipole – Equipotentials and Conductors – Electric Potential Energy » of Charge in External Electric Field Electric Potential V Q 4pe0 r Q 4pe0 R R r R C R B r B q r A A path independence equipotentials Electric Potential • Suppose charge q0 is moved from pt A to pt B through a region of space described by electric field E. q0 A E B • Since there will be a force on the charge due to E, a certain amount of work WAB will have to be done to accomplish this task. We define the electric potential difference as: • Is this a good definition? • Is VB - VA independent of q0? • Is VB - VA independent of path? Independent of Charge? Fwe supply = -Felec • To move a charge in an E field, we must supply a force just equal and opposite to Felec q0 that experienced by the charge due to E the E field. A B 1 Lecture 5, ACT 1 • A single charge ( Q = -1mC) is fixed at the origin. Define point A at x = + 5m and point B at x = +2m. – What is the sign of the potential difference between A and B? (VAB VB - VA ) (a) VAB < 0 (b) VAB = 0 B -1mC (c) VAB > 0 A x Independent of Path? Felec -Felec q0 E A B • This equation also serves as the definition for the potential difference VB - VA. •The integral is the sum of the tangential (to the path) component of the electric field along a path from A to B. •The question now is: Does this integral depend upon the exact path chosen to move from A to B? •If it does, we have a lousy definition. • Hopefully, it doesn’t. • It doesn’t. But, don’t take our word, see appendix and following example. Does it really work? • Consider case of constant field: – Direct: A - B B hQ A C r E dl • Long way round: A - C - B • So here we have at least one example of a case in which the integral is the same for BOTH paths. Electric Potential • Define the electric potential of a point in space as the potential difference between that point and a reference point. • a good reference point is infinity ... we typically set V = 0 • the electric potential is then defined as: • for a point charge, the formula is: Potential from charged spherical shell V • E Fields (from Gauss' Law) • r < R: E=0 • r > R: E= • Potentials • r > R: • r < R: 1 Q 4 pe0 r 2 Q 4pe0 R Q 4pe0 r R R R r Potential from N charges r1 The potential from a collection of N charges is just the algebraic sum of the potential due to each charge separately. x q1 q2 r2 r3 q3 Electric Dipole The potential is much easier to calculate than the field since it is an algebraic sum of 2 scalar terms. z +q aq a r1 r r2-r1 -q • Rewrite this for special case r>>a: Can we use this potential somehow to calculate the E field of a dipole? (remember how messy the direct calculation was?) r2 Appendix: Independent of Path? • We want to evaluate potential difference from A to B • What path should we choose to evaluate the integral?. • If we choose straight line, the integral is difficult to evaluate. • Magnitude different at each pt along line. • Angle between E and path is different at each pt along line E B r B q A C E A . • If we choose path ACB as shown, our calculation is much easier! • From A to C, E is perpendicular to the path. ie • From A to C, E is perpendicular to the path. ie r B r B q r A A Appendix: Independent of Path? • Evaluate potential difference from A to B along path ACB. by definition: Evaluate the integral: C E B r B q r A A Appendix: Independent of Path? C B r B r q • How general is this result? • A B Consider the approximation to the straight path from A->B (white arrow) = 2 arcs (radii = r1 and r2) plus the 3 connecting radial pieces. • For the 2 arcs + 3 radials path: A r2 q r1 A This is the same result as above!! The straight line path is better approximated by Increasing the number of arcs and radial pieces. Appendix: Independent of Path? B r2 q r1 A • Consider any path from A to B as being made up of a succession of arc plus radial parts as above. The work along the arcs will always be 0, leaving just the sum of the radial parts. All inner sums will cancel, leaving just the initial and final radii as above.. Therefore it's general! Calculating Electric Potentials Calculate the potential V(r) at the point shown (r<a) • Where do we know the potential, and where do we need to know it? V=0 at r= ... we need r<a ... • Determine E(r) for all regions in between these two points II III IV uncharged conductor I r a c b sphere with charge Q • Determine DV for each region by integration ... and so on ... • Check the sign of each potential difference DV DV > 0 means we went “uphill” DV < 0 means we went “downhill” (from the point of view of a positive charge) E from V? • We can obtain the electric field E from the potential V by inverting our previous relation between E and V: • Expressed as a vector, E is the negative gradient of V • Cartesian coordinates: • Spherical coordinates: E from V: an Example • Consider the following electric potential: • What electric field does this describe? ... expressing this as a vector: • Something for you to try: Can you use the dipole potential to obtain the dipole field? Try it in spherical coordinates ... you should get: Electric Dipole • Last time, we derived for r>>a: z +q r1 r aq a -q • Calculate E in spherical coordinates: the dipole moment r2 The Bottom Line If we know the electric field E everywhere, allows us to calculate the potential function V everywhere (define VA = 0 above) If we know the potential function V everywhere, 1 allows us to calculate the electric field E everywhere. Units for Potential! 1 Joule/Coulomb = 1 VOLT z Lecture 5, ACT 2 • Consider the dipole shown at the right. – Fix r = r0 >> a – Define qmax such that the polar component of the electric field has its maximum value (for r=r0). 1 What is qmax? (a) qmax = 0 (b) qmax = 45 Remember +q r1 r aq a -q (c) qmax = 90 r2 Dipole Field y= Etot z +q a q r E q 0 a Er -q 0 p/ p Q p p/ x= Equipotentials Defined as: The locus of points with the same potential. • Example: for a point charge, the equipotentials are spheres centered on the charge. • GENERAL PROPERTY: – The Electric Field is always perpendicular to an Equipotential Surface. • Why?? The gradient ( ) says E is in the direction of max rate of change. Along the surface, there is NO change in V (it’s an equipotential!) So, there is NO E component along the surface either… E must therefore be normal to surface Dipole Equipotentials Conductors + + + + + + + + + • Claim + + + + + The surface of a conductor is always an equipotential surface (in fact, the entire conductor is an equipotential) • Why?? If surface were not equipotential, there would be an Electric Field component parallel to the surface and the charges would move!! • Note Positive charges move from regions of higher potential to lower potential (move from high potential energy to lower PE). Equilibrium means charges rearrange so potentials equal. Charge on Conductors? • How is charge distributed on the surface of a conductor? – KEY: Must produce E=0 inside the conductor and E normal to the surface . Spherical example (with little off-center charge): + + + + - -- + - + + -+q - + + - + + - + + + + + E=0 inside conducting shell. charge density induced on inner surface non-uniform. charge density induced on outer surface uniform E outside has spherical symmetry centered on spherical conducting shell. A Point Charge Near Conducting Plane q + a V=0 - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A Point Charge Near Conducting Plane q + a The magnitude of the force is q2 F 4pe0 2a 2 1 Image Charge The test charge is attracted to a conducting plane Charge on Conductor • How is the charge distributed on a non-spherical conductor?? Claim largest charge density at smallest radius of curvature. • 2 spheres, connected by a wire, “far” apart • Both at same potential rL rS But: Smaller sphere has the larger surface charge density ! Equipotential Example • Field lines more closely spaced near end with most curvature . • Field lines ^ to surface near the surface (since surface is equipotential). • Equipotentials have similar shape as surface near the surface. • Equipotentials will look more circular (spherical) at large r. Electric Potential Energy • The Coulomb force is a CONSERVATIVE force (i.e. the work done by it on a particle which moves around a closed path returning to its initial position is ZERO.) • Therefore, a particle moving under the influence of the Coulomb force is said to have an electric potential energy defined by: this “q” is the ‘test charge” in other examples... • The total energy (kinetic + electric potential) is then conserved for a charged particle moving under the influence of the Coulomb force. St Elmo’s Fire Lightning Energy Units MKS: U = QV for particles (e, p, ...) 1 coulomb-volt = 1 joule 1 eV = 1.6x10-19 joules Accelerators • Electrostatic: VandeGraaff electrons 100 keV ( 105 eV) • Electromagnetic: Fermilab protons 1TeV ( 1012 eV)