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Electric Fields and Potential Force Fields  Forces act without contact between objects  Gravitational field pull mass towards earth  Electric field surrounds electrically charged objects  Explains action at a distance Electric Field Proposed by Michael Faraday (1830’s)  Has both magnitude (strength) and direction  Magnitude measured by force exerted on charged particle in the field  Direction is that of the force on a small positive “test charge”  Can be visualized by electric field lines (lines of force)  Electric Field  Field lines start on positive charges, end on negative  Arrows show direction, away from positive, towards negative Electric Field: Isolated Charges Electric Shielding  Excess charge always located on the surface of a conductor  Electric field inside conductor is zero  Effects of surface charge cancel so no effect from surface charge inside conductor  If surface is sphere, excess charge will be uniformly distributed on surface Electric Shielding  If shape is irregular, charges are more concentrated at points & corners  Electrical components often housed inside metal boxes to shield from external fields  Cables often have shielding to reduce stray signals from surrounding fields  Cars and airplanes safe from lightning Electrical Potential Energy  Work must be done to move charged object into electrical field, like lifting weight in gravitational field  Work done increases potential energy of charged object  If object is released, potential energy will be converted to kinetic energy Electric Potential  If amount of charge is increased, amount of work must increase to raise potential energy of object.  More convenient term is electric potential, electric potential energy divided by amount of charge present  At any point in field, potential is same, regardless how much charge is present Electric Potential  Unit of potential is volt (V)  1 volt = 1 joule/1 coulomb  Commonly called voltage  Voltage is independent of amount of charge; high voltages possible with very little charge present, therefore little energy Capacitors  Capacitor is device used to store charge  Consists of two conducting plates separated by an insulator  No electrical contact between plates  Electrons are pushed onto one plate by battery which pushes electrons off the other plate Capacitors  This stores charge on the plates and energy in the electric field between the plates  Capacitor can be discharged, releasing stored energy  Commercial capacitors made in many different forms, very common in circuits
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            