* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Presentation 01
Circular dichroism wikipedia , lookup
Weightlessness wikipedia , lookup
Introduction to gauge theory wikipedia , lookup
Fundamental interaction wikipedia , lookup
Electromagnetism wikipedia , lookup
History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic monopole wikipedia , lookup
Anti-gravity wikipedia , lookup
Maxwell's equations wikipedia , lookup
Aharonov–Bohm effect wikipedia , lookup
Mathematical formulation of the Standard Model wikipedia , lookup
Speed of gravity wikipedia , lookup
Lorentz force wikipedia , lookup
Field (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Workshop: Using Visualization in Teaching Introductory E&M AAPT National Summer Meeting, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Organizers: John Belcher, Peter Dourmashkin, Carolann Koleci, Sahana Murthy P01 - 1 MIT Class: Particle Interactions: Coulomb’s Law P01 - 2 Gravitational Vector Field P01 - 3 Example Of Vector Field: Gravitation Gravitational Force: Mm Fg G 2 rˆ r Gravitational Field: GMm / r 2 M g rˆ G 2 rˆ m m r Fg M : Mass of Earth P01 - 4 Example Of Vector Field: Gravitation Gravitational Field: M g G 2 rˆ r Fg mg Created by M Felt by m rˆ : r: unit vector from M to m vector from M to m r rˆ r M g G 3 r r M : Mass of Earth USE THIS FORM! P01 - 5 The Superposition Principle Net force/field is vector sum of forces/fields Example: F13 / g13 1 F3 F13 F23 In general: N F j Fij i1 2 P01 - 6 In Class Problem Find the gravitational field g at point P Bonus: Where would you put another mass m to make the field g become 0 at P? M Use g G 3 r r NOTE: Solutions will be posted within two days of class P01 - 7 From Gravitational to Electric Fields P01 - 8 Electric Charge (~Mass) Two types of electric charge: positive and negative Unit of charge is the coulomb [C] Charge of electron (negative) or proton (positive) is 19 e, e 1.602 10 C Charge is quantized Q Ne Charge is conserved n p e e e P01 - 9 Electric Force (~Gravity) The electric force between charges q1 and q2 is (a) repulsive if charges have same signs (b) attractive if charges have opposite signs Like charges repel and opposites attract !! P01 - 10 Coulomb's Law Coulomb’s Law: Force on q2 due to interaction between q1 and q2 q1q2 F12 ke 2 rˆ r ke rˆ : r: 1 4 0 8.9875 109 N m 2 /C2 unit vector from q1 to q2 vector from q1 to q2 r rˆ r q1q2 F12 ke 3 r r P01 - 11 Coulomb's Law: Example q3 = 3 C a=1m q1 = 6 C F32 ? r32 r32 q2 = 3 C r 1m 1 2 ˆi 3 2 r F32 ke q3q2 3 9 109 N m 2 C2 3C 3C r 81109 ˆ i 3ˆj 2 ˆj m 1 2 ˆi 3ˆj m 1m 3 N P01 - 12 The Superposition Principle Many Charges Present: Net force on any charge is vector sum of forces from other individual charges Example: F3 F13 F23 In general: N F j Fij i1 P01 - 13 Electric Field (~g) The electric field at a point P due to a charge q is the force acting on a test charge q0 at that point P, divided by the charge q0 : Eq ( P) For a point charge q: Fqq0 q0 q Eq ( P) ke 2 rˆ r Units: N/C, also Volts/meter P01 - 14 Superposition Principle The electric field due to a collection of N point charges is the vector sum of the individual electric fields due to each charge N Etotal E1 E2 ..... Ei i1 P01 - 15 Gravitational & Electric Fields SOURCE: Mass Ms Charge qs (±) CREATE: Ms g G 2 rˆ r qs E ke 2 rˆ r Fg mg FE qE FEEL: This is easiest way to picture field P01 - 16 PRS Question: Electric Field P01 - 17 PRS: Electric Field :20 Two opposite charges are placed on a line as shown below. The charge on the right is three times larger than the charge on the left. Other than at infinity, where is the electric field zero? 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Between the two charges To the right of the charge on the right To the left of the charge on the left The electric field is nowhere zero Not enough info – need to know which is positive I don’t know P01 - 18 PRS Answer: Electric Field Answer: 3. To the left of the charge on the left Between: field goes from source to sink. On right: field dominated by qR (bigger & closer). On left: because qL is weaker, its “push” left will somewhere be balanced by qR’s “pull” right P01 - 19 Electric Field Lines 1. Join end-to-end infinitesimal vectors representing E…the curve that results is an electric field line (also known as line of force). 2. By construction then, the direction of the E field at any given point is tangent to the field line crossing that point. 3. Field lines point away from positive charges and terminate on negative charges. 4. Field lines never cross each other. 5. The strength of the field is encoded in the density of the field lines. P01 - 20 PRS Questions: Electric Field P01 - 21 PRS: Force The force between the two charges is: 50% 25% 25% 0% 1. 2. 3. 4. Attractive Repulsive Can’t tell without more information I don’t know P01 - 22 PRS Answer: Force The force between the two charges is: 2) Repulsive One way to tell is to notice that they both must be sources (or sinks). Hence, as like particles repel, the force is repulsive. You can also see this as tension in the field lines P01 - 23 PRS: Field Lines Electric field lines show: 1. Directions of forces that exist in space at all times. 2. Directions in which charges on those lines will 67% accelerate. 3. Paths that charges will follow. 4. More than one of the above. 33% 5. I don’t know. Remember: Don’t pick up until you are ready to answer 0% 5 4 3 0% 2 1 0% P01 - 24 PRS Answer: Field Lines Answer: 2. Directions charges accelerate. NOTE: This is different than flow lines (3). Particles do NOT move along field lines. P01 - 25 In-Class Problem P ĵ s q d î q Consider two point charges of equal magnitude but opposite signs, separated by a distance d. Point P lies along the perpendicular bisector of the line joining the charges, a distance s above that line. What is the E field at P? P01 - 26 Two PRS Questions: E Field of Finite # of Point Charges P01 - 27 PRS: Equal Charges 1. E 3. E Electric field at P is: 1 2 3 4 5 2ke qs 2 d s 4 2 3/ 2 ˆj 2. E 3/ 2 ˆj 4. E 2ke qd 2 d2 s 4 2ke qd 2 d2 s 4 ˆi 3/ 2 2ke qs 2 d2 s 4 3/ 2 ˆi 75% 25% 3 2 5. I Don't Know 1 0% 0% 0% 5 2. 3. 4. 5. 4 1. P01 - 28 PRS Answer: Equal Charges Electric field at P is: 1. E 2ke qs 2 d s 4 2 3/ 2 There are a several ways to see this. For example, consider d0. Then, 2q ˆ E ke 2 j s which is what we want (sitting above a point charge with charge 2q) ˆj P01 - 29 PRS: 5 Equal Charges equal positive charges q sit at the vertices of a 1.Six regular hexagon with sides of length R. We remove the bottom charge. The electric field at the center of the hexagon (point P) is: 1 2. 2 3. 3 4. 4 5. 5 6. 6 100% 0% 0% 6 0% 5 0% 4 0% 3 ˆj 2kq ˆ 2. E 2 j R kq ˆ 4. E 2 j R 6. I Don't Know 2 ˆj 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2kq 1. E 2 R kq 3. E 2 R 5. E 0 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. P01 - 30 PRS Answer: 5 Equal Charges kq ˆ Answer : 4. E 2 j R • E fields of the side pairs cancel (symmetry) • E at center due only to top charge (R away) • Field points downward Alternatively: • “Added negative charge” at bottom • R away, pulls field down P01 - 31 Charging P01 - 32 How Do You Get Charged? • Friction • Transfer (touching) • Induction +q - Neutral + + + + P01 - 33 Demonstrations: Instruments for Charging P01 - 34 Electric Dipoles A Special Charge Distribution P01 - 35 Electric Dipole Two equal but opposite charges +q and –q, separated by a distance 2a Dipole Moment q p 2a -q p p charge×displacement q×2aˆj 2qaˆj points from negative to positive charge P01 - 36 Why Dipoles? Nature Likes To Make Dipoles! Animation P01 - 37 Dipoles make Fields P01 - 38 Electric Field Created by Dipole Thou shalt use components! rˆ r x ˆ y ˆ 3 3 i 3 j 2 r r r r x x E x ke q 3 3 r r x x ke q x 2 ( y a)2 3/ 2 x 2 ( y a)2 3/ 2 y y ya ya E y ke q 3 3 k e q 2 2 3/ 2 2 2 3/ 2 r r x ( y a) x ( y a) P01 - 39 PRS Question: Dipole Fall-Off P01 - 40 PRS: Dipole Field As you move to large distances r away from a dipole, the electric field will fall-off as: 100% 0% 0% 0% 1. 2. 3. 4. 1/r2, just like a point charge More rapidly than 1/r2 More slowly than 1/r2 I Don’t Know P01 - 41 PRS Answer: Dipole Field Answer: 2) More rapidly than 1/r2 We know this must be a case by thinking about what a dipole looks like from a large distance. To first order, it isn’t there (net charge is 0), so the E-Field must decrease faster than if there were a point charge there. P01 - 42 Point Dipole Approximation Take the limit r a Finite Dipole You can show… 3p Ex sin cos 3 4 0 r Ey Point Dipole p 4 0 r 3cos 1 2 3 P01 - 43 Shockwave for Dipole Dipole Visualization P01 - 44 Dipoles feel Fields P01 - 45 Demonstration: Dipole in Field P01 - 46 Dipole in Uniform Field E Eˆi p 2qa(cos ˆi sin ˆj) Total Net Force: Fnet F F qE (q)E 0 Torque on Dipole: τ r F pE rF sin( ) 2a qE sin( ) pE sin( ) p tends to align with the electric field P01 - 47 Torque on Dipole Total Field (dipole + background) shows torque: Animation • Field lines transmit tension • Connection between dipole field and constant field “pulls” dipole into alignment P01 - 48 PRS Question: Dipole in Non-Uniform Field P01 - 49 PRS: Dipole in Non-Uniform Field E A dipole sits in a non-uniform electric field E Due to the electric field this dipole will feel: 67% 33% 0% 0% 1. 2. 3. 4. force but no torque no force but a torque both a force and a torque neither a force nor a torque P01 - 50 PRS Answer: Non-Uniform Field E Answer: 3. both force and torque Because the field is non-uniform, the forces on the two equal but opposite point charges do not cancel. As always, the dipole wants to rotate to align with the field – there is a torque on the dipole as well P01 - 51 Continuous Charge Distributions P01 - 52 Continuous Charge Distributions Break distribution into parts: V Q qi dq i V E field at P due to q q dq E ke 2 rˆ d E ke 2 rˆ r r Superposition: E P ? E E dE P01 - 53 Continuous Sources: Charge Density R dQ dV Volume V R 2 L L w Area A wL L Length L L Q V dQ dA Q A dQ dL Q L P01 - 54 Examples of Continuous Sources: Line of charge dQ dL Length L Q L L Link to applet P01 - 55 Examples of Continuous Sources: Line of charge dQ dL Length L Q L L Link to applet P01 - 56 Examples of Continuous Sources: Ring of Charge Q dQ dL 2 R Link to applet P01 - 57 Examples of Continuous Sources: Ring of Charge Q dQ dL 2 R Link to applet P01 - 58 Example: Ring of Charge P on axis of ring of charge, x from center Radius a, charge density . Find E at P P01 - 59 Ring of Charge 1) Think about it E 0 Symmetry! Mental Picture… 2) Define Variables dq dl a d r a x 2 2 P01 - 60 Ring of Charge 3) Write Equation rˆ r dE ke dq 2 ke dq 3 r r dq a d r a2 x2 x dEx ke dq 3 r P01 - 61 Ring of Charge dq a d 4) Integrate r a2 x2 x Ex dEx ke dq 3 r x ke 3 dq r Very special case: everything except dq is constant dq 2 0 2 a d a d a2 0 Q P01 - 62 Ring of Charge 5) Clean Up x E x ke Q 3 r E x ke Q E ke Q x a 2 x 2 3/ 2 x a 2 x 2 3/ 2 ˆi 6) Check Limit a 0 E x ke Q x x 2 3/ 2 ke Q 2 x P01 - 63 In-Class: Line of Charge ĵ r̂ P î s L 2 L 2 Point P lies on perpendicular bisector of uniformly charged line of length L, a distance s away. The charge on the line is Q. What is E at P? P01 - 64 Hint: Line of Charge ĵ r̂ î P r s 2 x 2 s L 2 x dq dx dx L 2 Typically give the integration variable (x’) a “primed” variable name. ALSO: Difficult integral (trig. sub.) P01 - 65 E Field from Line of Charge Q ˆj E ke 2 2 1/ 2 s( s L / 4) Limits: Qˆ lim E ke 2 j s L s Qˆ ˆ j 2ke j lim E 2ke s L Ls s Point charge Infinite charged line P01 - 66 In-Class: Uniformly Charged Disk ( x 0) P on axis of disk of charge, x from center Radius R, charge density . Find E at P P01 - 67 Disk: Two Important Limits Edisk x 1 2 2 2 o x R 1/ 2 ˆi Limits: lim Edisk x R Qˆ i 2 4 o x *** lim Edisk x R 1 ˆ i 2 o Point charge Infinite charged plane P01 - 68 Scaling: E for Plane is Constant 1) 2) 3) 4) Dipole: E falls off like 1/r3 Point charge: E falls off like 1/r2 Line of charge: E falls off like 1/r Plane of charge: E constant P01 - 69