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2135 Exam? That reminds me… must pick up test prep HW. adapted from http://www.nearingzero.net (nz118.jpg) Announcements Grades spreadsheets will be posted the day after Exam 1. You will need your PIN to find your grade. If you haven’t received your PIN yet, it will be on your exam or it will be emailed to you.* If you lose your PIN, ask your recitation instructor. If you haven’t received it yet, ask your instructor about it tomorrow in recitation. *No PIN = you can’t look up your exam grade ahead of time! Have to go to recitation. Physics 2135 Test Rooms, Spring 2016: Instructor Dr. Hale Dr. Kurter Dr. Madison Mr. Noble Dr. Parris Mr. Upshaw Sections G, J D, F H, N B, E K, M A, C, L Special Accommodations Exam is from 5:00-6:00 pm! Room 125 BCH 104 Physics 199 Toomey B-10 Bert. G-31 EECH G-3 Schrenk Testing Center Know the exam time! Find your room ahead of time! If at 5:00 on test day you are lost, go to 104 Physics and check the exam room schedule, then go to the appropriate room and take the exam there. Reminders: No external communication allowed while you are in the exam room. No texting! No cell phones! Be sure to bring a calculator! You will need it. No headphones. Do you know the abbreviations for: millimicronanopico-? Will you know them by 5:00 pm tomorrow? Exam 1 Review The fine print: the problems in this lecture are the standard “exam review lecture” problems and are not a guarantee of the exam content. Please Look at Prior Tests! Caution: spring 2011 exam 1 did not cover capacitors—not true this semester. Overview Electric charge and electric force Coulomb’s Law Electric field calculating electric field motion of a charged particle in an electric field Gauss’ Law electric flux calculating electric field using Gaussian surfaces properties of conductors Exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the review lecture. Overview Electric potential and electric potential energy calculating potentials and potential energy calculating fields from potentials equipotentials potentials and fields near conductors Capacitors capacitance of parallel plates, concentric cylinders, (concentric spheres not for this exam) equivalent capacitance of capacitor network Don’t forget concepts from physics 1135 that we used! Exam problems may come from topics not covered on test preparation homework or during the review lecture. If you need to evaluate an integral on tomorrow’s exam, you will be given the integral. Exception: xn where n is a real number. If you don’t know what you are doing, pretend that you do and write stuff down. You might know more than you think you do! A positive point charge Q1 = +Q is located at position (0,D) and a negative point charge Q2 = -2Q is located at position (L,D). What is the electric field at the point (x=L, y=0)? Express your answer in unit vector notation using the symbols given above and the constants k or 0. y L Q1=+Q D Q2=-2Q Q Ek 2 r D x What is the electric field at the point (x=L, y=0)? E E1 E 2 E1x ˆi E1y E 2y ˆj E1x E1 cos k y Q 2 2 2 L D L L2 D2 kQL 2 2 32 L D L Q1=+Q Q2=-2Q D E2 E1y D E1 x E2y L 2 kQD D 2kQ 2 D 2 32 What is the electric field at the point (x=L, y=0)? kQL kQD 2kQ ˆ ˆ E i 2 j 3 2 3 2 L2 D2 L2 D2 D y You could factor kQ out of the expression on the right hand side, but I don’t see that it simplifies anything much, so let’s put a box around our answer and call it done. L Q1=+Q Q2=-2Q D D E2 E1 x A negative point charge -q is placed at (x=L, y=0). What is the electric force on the point charge? Express your answer in unit vector notation using the symbols above and the constants k or 0. y L Q1=+Q Let’s be smart here… Q2=-2Q F qE D D -q F q E from previous slide x kQL kQD 2kQ ˆ ˆ F q i 2 j 3 2 3 2 2 2 L2 D2 D L D Again, you could factor kQ out of the expression on the right hand side, or multiply both terms by –q. How about instead let’s put a box around our answer and call it done. y L Q1=+Q Q2=-2Q D D -q x An insulating spherical shell has an inner radius b and outer radius c. The shell has a uniformly distributed total charge +Q. Concentric with the shell is a solid conducting sphere of total charge +2Q and radius a<b. Find the magnitude of the electric field for r<a. Use first and last slide for in-person lecture; delete for video lecture This looks like a test preparation homework problem, but it is different! An insulating spherical shell has an inner radius b and outer radius c. The shell has a uniformly distributed total charge +Q. Concentric with the shell is a solid conducting sphere of total charge +2Q and radius a<b. Find the magnitude of the electric field for r<a. +Q For 0<r<a, we are inside the conductor, so E=0. If E=0 there is no need to specify a direction (and the problem doesn’t ask for one anyway). b a c +2Q An insulating spherical shell has an inner radius b and outer radius c. The shell has a uniformly distributed total charge +Q. Concentric with the shell is a solid conducting sphere of total charge +2Q and radius a<b. Use Gauss’ Law to find the magnitude of the electric field for a<r<b. q enclosed E dA o 2Q E 4r o 2 +Q b c a r +2Q Q E 2 o r 2 Be able to do this: begin with a statement of Gauss’s Law. Draw an appropriate Gaussian surface on the diagram and label its radius r. Justify the steps leading to your answer. An insulating spherical shell has an inner radius b and outer radius c. The shell has a uniformly distributed total charge +Q. Concentric with the shell is a solid conducting sphere of total charge +2Q and radius a<b. Use Gauss’ Law to find the magnitude of the electric field for b<r<c. q enclosed E dA o E 4r 2 +Q qshell,enclosed q conductor,enclosed o b c q conductor,enclosed 2Q q shell,enclosed shell Vshell,enclosed Qshell Vshell,enclosed Vshell +2Q a r q shell,enclosed qshell,enclosed Qshell Vshell,enclosed Vshell Q +2Q a r c Q r 3 b3 c 3 b3 Q r 3 b3 E 4r b 4 3 4 3 r b 3 4 3 4 3 3 c b 3 3 q shell,enclosed 2 +Q c 3 b 3 o 2Q The direction of E is shown in the diagram. Solving for the magnitude E (do it!) is “just” math. Q r 3 b3 E 4r 2 c 3 b 3 o +Q 2Q b +2Q a r c What would be different if we had concentric cylinders instead of concentric spheres? What would be different if the outer shell were a conductor instead of an insulator? An insulating spherical shell has an inner radius b and outer radius c. The shell has a uniformly distributed total charge +Q. Concentric with the shell is a solid conducting sphere of total charge +2Q and radius a<b. Find the magnitude of the electric field for b<r<c. Qshell 4 3 4 3 c b 3 3 q enclosed E dA o 4 3 4 3 r b 2Q 3 3 2 E 4r o What would be different if we had concentric cylinders instead of concentric spheres? What would be different if the outer shell were a conductor instead of an insulator? Two equal positive charges Q are located at the base of an equilateral triangle with sides of length a. What is the potential at point P (see diagram)? q V=k r P Q Q Q VP = k k = 2k a a a a Q Q What would you do differently if you were told Q is negative? “No way you are going to give us a test problem this easy!” Are you going to complain if we do? An electron is released from rest at point P. What path will the electron follow? What will its speed be when it passes closest to either charge Q? P - a Q Q An electron is released from rest at point P. What path will the electron follow? What will its speed be when it passes closest to either charge Q? 0 Ef Ei Wother if vi=0 - initial 0 K f U f K i Ui 0 a Q a/2 K f Uf Ui = U = q V v a/2 final Q Don’t mix up your big V’s and little v’s! 1 mv 2 e Vf Vi 2 1 Q Q mv 2 e 2k 2k 2 a a 2 An electron is released from rest at point P. What path will the electron follow? What will its speed be when it passes closest to either charge Q? 1 Q Q mv 2 e 2k 2k 2 a a 2 vi=0 - initial 1 Q Q 2 mv e 4k 2k 2 a a a Q a/2 v a/2 final Q 1 Q 2 mv e 2k 2 a Qe v2 k ma For the capacitor system shown, C1=6.0 F, C2=2.0 F, and C3=10.0 F. (a) Find the equivalent capacitance. C1=6F V0 C2=2F C3=10F C23 = C2 + C3 = 2 + 10 = 12μF For the capacitor system shown, C1=6.0 F, C2=2.0 F, and C3=10.0 F. (a) Find the equivalent capacitance. C1=6F V0 C23=12F 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 = + = + = + = = Ceq C1 C23 6 12 12 12 12 4 C eq = 4μF Don’t expect the equivalent capacitance to always be an integer! For the capacitor system shown, C1=6.0 F, C2=2.0 F, and C3=10.0 F. (b) The charge on capacitor C3 is found to be 30.0 C. Find V0. C1=6F C2=2F V0 3=10F C3C=10F Q3= 30C V3= ? There are several correct ways to solve this. Shown here is just one. Q = CV V = Q C V3 = V2 = V23 = Q3 30 = = 3V C3 10 For the capacitor system shown, C1=6.0 F, C2=2.0 F, and C3=10.0 F. (b) The charge on capacitor C3 is found to be 30.0 C. Find V0. C1=6F C23=12F Q23= ? V23= 3V V0 Q23 = C23 V23 = 12 3 = 36 μC = Q1 = Qeq = Ceq V0 V0 = 36 36 = = 9V Ceq 4