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Electric Potential 2 Q V 4pe0 R Q 4pe0 r R r C B r a B q r A A path independence a Previously • • • • Work has to be done to move a charge in an electric field A charge has potential energy in the field Define potential energy (U) = charge (Q) x electric potential (V) Then V E dl • A positive test charge will move toward lower potential • Define zero potential at infinity • Potential difference between two points Question 1 Two test charges are brought separately to the vicinity of positive charge Q. Q + Q + r – charge +q is brought to pt A, a distance r from Q. – charge +2q is brought to pt B, a distance 2r from Q. q A 2r – Compare the potential at point A (VA) to that at B (VB): (a) VA < VB (b) VA = VB (c) VA > VB 2q B Question 1 Two test charges are brought separately to the vicinity of positive charge Q. Q + Q + r – charge +q is brought to pt A, a distance r from Q. – charge +2q is brought to pt B, a distance 2r from Q. q A 2r 2q B – Compare the potential at point A (VA) to that at B (VB): (a) VA < VB (b) VA = VB (c) VA > VB • THE POTENTIAL IS A FUNCTION OF THE SPACE !!!!! • The Potential does not depend on the “test” charge at all. A positive “test charge” would move (“fall”) from point A towards point B. Therefore, VA > VB In fact, since point B is twice as far from the charge as point A, we calculate that VA = 2VB!! Potential Difference between two points • We want to evaluate the potential difference from A to B in the field of a point charge q E What path should we choose to evaluate the integral? •If we choose straight line, the integral is difficult to evaluate. B • • Magnitude r B q of the field is different at each point along the line. • Angle between E and path is different at each point along line. r A A Potential difference between two points • We want to evaluate the potential difference from A to B in the field of a point charge q E C • Instead choose path A->C then C->B B From A to C, E is perpendicular to the path. i.e r B q From C to B, E is parallel to the path. i.e r A A Potential Difference between 2 points C • Evaluate potential difference from A to B along path ACB. E B by definition: r B Evaluate the integral: q r A A C Independent of Path? B r B • How general is this result? • Consider the approximation to the straight path from A->B (white arrow) = 2 arcs (radii = r1 and r2) plus the 3 connecting radial pieces. r A A q B r2 • For the 2 arcs + 3 radials path: A r1 q This is the same result as above!! The straight line path is better approximated by Increasing the number of arcs and radial pieces. 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 Question 2 +5 μC -3 μC A 9) Two charges q1 = + 5 μC, q2 = -3μC are placed at equal distances from the point A. What is the electric potential at point A? a) VA < 0 b) VA = 0 c) VA > 0 Question 2 +5 μC -3 μC A Two charges q1 = + 5 μC, q2 = -3μC are placed at equal distances from the point A. What is the electric potential at point A? a) VA < 0 b) VA = 0 c) VA > 0 A positive test charge would move to the right Question 3 • Which of the following charge distributions produces V(x) = 0 for all points on the x-axis? (we are defining V(x) 0 at x =) +2mC +1mC +2mC +1mC x -1mC -2mC (a) +2mC -2mC x -1mC -2mC (b) x -1mC (c) +1mC Question 3 • Which of the following charge distributions produces V(x) = 0 for all points on the x-axis? (we are defining V(x) 0 at x =) +2mC +1mC +2mC +1mC x -1mC -2mC (a) +2mC -2mC x -1mC -2mC (b) x -1mC (c) +1mC The total potential at a point is the ALGEBRAIC sum of the contributions. Therefore, to make V(x)=0 for all x, the +Q and -Q contributions must cancel. Thus any point on the x-axis must be equidistant from +2mC and -2mC and also from +1mC and -1mC. This condition is met only in case (a)! Calculating Electric Potentials Calculate the potential V(r) at the point shown (r<a) I II III IV uncharged conductor r solid sphere with total charge Q a c b 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 uncharged conductor I II III IV r a solid sphere with total charge Q • Determine V for each region by integration c b Calculating Electric Potentials Calculate the potential V(r) at the point shown (r < a) uncharged conductor I II III IV r a c b solid sphere with total charge Q • Check the sign of each potential difference V V > 0 means we went “uphill” V < 0 means we went “downhill” (from the point of view of a positive charge) ... and so on ... Calculating Electric Potentials III IV • Look at first term: • Line integral from infinity to c has to be positive, pushing against a force: dl r a E 1 Q 1 Q 4pe o r 4pe o c c • What’s left? I II c b Calculating Electric Potentials I II III IV • Look at third term: dl • Line integral from b to a, again has to be positive, pushing against a force: 1 Q 1 Q (b a ) 4pe o r b 4pe o ab a • What’s left? Previous slide we have calculated this already E r a c b Calculating Electric Potentials I II III IV • Look at last term: dl • Line integral from a to r, again has to be positive, pushing against a force. r a E • But this time the force doesn’t vary the same way, since “r ’ ” determines the amount of source charge Q r3 a 3 c b Q This is the charge that is inside “r” and sources field • What’s left to do? • ADD THEM ALL UP! • Sum the potentials r 1 Qr 1 Q r2 1 2 3 4pe o 2a a 4pe o 2a a 2 Calculating Electric Potentials I II Calculate the potential V(r) at the point shown (r < a) • Add up the terms from I, III and IV: I III dl III IV E r a c b IV dl Potential increase from moving into the sphere The potential difference from infinity to a if the conducting shell weren’t there An adjustment to account for the fact that the conductor is an equipotential, V= 0 from c → b Calculating Electric Potentials Summary The potential as a function of r for all 4 regions is: I r > c: II b < r < c: III a < r < b: IV r < a: I II III IV r a c b Let’s try some numbers Q = 6m C a = 5cm b = 8cm c = 10cm I II III IV r a I r > c: V(r = 12cm) = 449.5 kV II b < r < c: V(r = 9cm) = 539.4 kV III a < r < b: V(r = 7cm) = 635.7 kV IV r < a: V(r = 3cm) = 961.2 kV c b Sparks • High electric fields can ionize nonconducting materials (“dielectrics”) Dielectric Insulator Conductor Breakdown • Breakdown can occur when the field is greater than the “dielectric strength” of the material. – E.g., in air, Emax 3 106 N/C 3 106 V/m 30 kV/cm What is ΔV? d 2mm Ex. Vdoorknob V Emax d Vfinger Arc discharge equalizes the potential 30 kV/cm• 0.2 cm 6 kV Note: High humidity can also bleed the charge off reduce ΔV. Question 3 Two charged balls are each at the same potential V. Ball 2 is twice as large as ball 1. r1 Ball 1 r2 Ball 2 As V is increased, which ball will induce breakdown first? (a) Ball 1 (b) Ball 2 (c) Same Time Question 3 Two charged balls are each at the same potential V. Ball 2 is twice as large as ball 1. r1 Ball 1 r2 Ball 2 As V is increased, which ball will induce breakdown first? (a) Ball 1 Esurface Q k 2 r \ (b) Ball 2 (c) Same Time Q r V Smaller r higher E closer to breakdown r V k Esurface Ex. V 100 kV 100 103 V r 0.03m 3cm 6 3 10 V/m High Voltage Terminals must be big! Lightning! + _ + _ + _ Collisions produce charged particles. The heavier particles (-) sit near the bottom of the cloud; the lighter particles (+) near the top. Stepped Leader Negatively charged electrons begin zigzagging downward. Attraction As the stepped leader nears the ground, it draws a streamer of positive charge upward. Flowing Charge As the leader and the streamer come together, powerful electric current begins flowing Contact! Intense wave of positive charge, a “return stroke,” travels upward at 108 m/s t ~ 30ms Factoids: V ~ 200 M volts I ~ 40,000 amp P ~ 1012 W Summary • If we know the electric field E, allows us to calculate the potential function V everywhere (define VA = 0 above) • Potential due to n charges: • Equipotential surfaces are surfaces where the potential is constant.