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Electrical Charges and the Electrical Interaction What do you know about electrical charges and their behavior? What do you know about electrical charges at the molecular, atomic, and subatomic level? Electrical Charges and the Electrical Interaction Charges in nature nucleon level and larger sub-nucleon level questions raised by electrical understanding of atoms What are charged particles? They are part of atoms. The nucleus contains protons (positively charged). Electrons (negatively charged) orbit the nucleus and sometimes can hop off and move around freely. Most materials are neutral. To give a material net charge, electrons must be added or removed. Charge is a conserved quantity. Electrical Charges and the Electrical Interaction Charges as the bearers of the electrical interaction one kind of charge, but positive and negative Like charges repel each other and opposite charges attract each other. Scotch tape lab Four pieces of tape • Pull two pieces off of table – bring near each other • Pull two pieces off of other tape – bring near each other • Pull one piece off of table, another off of a piece of tape, bring near each other Demonstrate likes repel, opposites attract? http://www.exo.net/~pauld/summer_institute/summer_day14electrostatic/ta pe_electroscope.html X-rays from Scotch tape W hat are some of the differences between gravitational forces and electrical forces? 1. Gravitational forces attract, while electrical forces can attract or repel. 2. Gravitational forces depend on the masses of the interacting objects, while electrical forces depend on the charges of the interacting objects. Similarity: Both decrease as the interacting objects move further apart. W hat are some of the differences between gravitational forces and electrical forces? 1. Gravitational forces attract, while electrical forces can attract or repel. 2. Gravitational forces depend on the masses of the interacting objects, while electrical forces depend on the charges of the interacting objects. Similarity: Both decrease as the interacting objects move further apart. Electrical Force (Coulombs Law) Gravitational Force Do assignment 5 worksheet on Coulomb’s law Van de Graff demo The dielectric breakdown strength of dry air, at Standard Temperature and Pressure (STP), between spherical electrodes is approximately 33 kV/cm The Ability of Materials to Transport Charge Insulators and conductors great range of conductivity Superconductors Semiconductors Iron man Processes of Charging By friction By contact By induction Processes of Charging By friction By contact By induction http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/travoltage Processes of Charging By friction By contact By induction Electroscope lab Processes of Charging By friction By contact By induction If the metal sphere is grounded while the wand induces a charge, the electrons will flow away to ground and leave the sphere with a net positive charge. Electric Field An electric charge creates an electric field in the space surrounding it. A second charge placed in this field will experience an electrical force. Electric field = force per unit charge The direction of the field lines represents the direction of the force on a positive test charge. They never cross. The Electric Field • The concept of a field compared to action at a distance • Representation of the electric field by lines of force What would the electric field lines look like for a charged conducting sphere? What would the electric field lines look like for a charged conducting plate? http://web.ncf.ca/ch865/englishdescr/3DEFldIdentCharges.html http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/electric-hockey Electric Potential Definition distinction from electric potential energy analogy to gravitational potential E is force per unit charge V is Electric potential energy per unit charge Parallel plate capacitor Charge separation An atom can become electrically polarized if a nearby charge causes its electron cloud to become distorted. Charge separation in atoms can be a widescale effect. Review of terms The electric potential is defined as the electric potential energyper unit charge. electric potential electric potential energy charge The electric field is defined as the electric force per unit charge. electric field electric force charge Conceptual questions 1) Why do clothes often cling together after tumbling in a clothes dryer? 2) At some automobile toll-collecting stations, a thin metal wire sticks up from the road and makes contact with cars before they reach the toll collector. What is the purpose of this wire? 3) An electroscope is a simple device consisting of a metal ball that is attached by a conductor to two thin leaves of metal foil protected from air disturbances in a jar, as shown. When the ball is touched by a charged body, the leaves that normally hang straight down spread apart. Why? (Electroscopes are useful not only as charge detectors, but also for measuring the quantity of charge: the more charge transferred to the ball, the more the leaves diverge.) 4) Is it necessary for a charged body to actually touch the ball of the electroscope for the leaves to diverge? Conceptual questions 5) The five thousand billion, billion freely moving electrons in a penny repel one another. Why don't they fly out of the penny? 6) How does the magnitude of electric force compare between a pair of charged particles when they are brought to half their original distance of separation? To one-quarter their original distance? To four times their original distance? (What law guides your answers?) 7) The proportionality constant k in Coulomb's Law is huge in ordinary units, whereas the proportionality constant G in Newton's law of gravitation is tiny. What does this indicate about the relative strengths of these two forces? 8) If you rub an inflated balloon against your hair and place it against a door, by what mechanism does it stick? Explain. Conceptual questions 9) How can a charged atom (an ion) attract a neutral atom? 10) If you place a free electron and a free proton in the same electric field, how will the forces acting on them compare? Their accelerations? Their directions of travel? 11) Suppose that a metal file cabinet is charged. How will the charge concentration at the corners of the cabinet compare with the charge concentration on the flat parts of the cabinet?