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Electric forces and electric fields • • • • • • • • • 1Proprieties of electric charges (Give an ex. of electrically charged) Electric charge can be + or – Like charges repel one another; and unlike charges attract one another Electric charge is always conserved The object become charged because – charge is transffered from one object to another An object may have charge of ±e, ±2e, ±3e e = 1.60219x10-19C SI unit: C (Coulomb) • 2 Insulators and conductors • In conductors, electric charges move freely in response to an electric force. All other materials are called insulators (give an ex. of each) • Semiconductors are between conductors and insulators. • An object connected to a conducting wire buried in the Earth is said to be grounded. • Induction – charging of a conductor • Charging an object by induction requires no contact with the object inducing the charge. • 3. Coulomb’s Law • An electric force has the following properties: • It is directing along a line joining the two particles and is inversely proportional to the square of the separation distance r, between them • It is proportional to the product of the magnitudes of the charges, |q1|and |q2|, of the 2 particles • It is attractive if the charges are of the opposite sign, and repulsive if the charges have the same sign • The magnitude of the electric force: • F=ke (|q1||q2|/r2) • ke – Coulomb constant ke = 8.9875x109N m2/C2 • 4. Electric Field • The electric field E produced by a charge Q at the location of a small “test” charge qo is defined as the electric force F exerted by Q and qo divided by the charge qo . • E=F/qo E=ke (|q|/r2) • Si unit : N/C • • • • • • Pb. Strategies: 1. Draw a diagram of the charges 2. Identify the charge of interest 3. Convert all units in SI 4. Apply Coulomb’s Law 5. Sum all the x- components of the resulting electric force • 6. Sum all the y-components of the resulting electric force • 7. Use Pythagorean theorem to find the magnitude and the direction of the force • 5. Electric field lines • 1. The electric field E is tangent to the electric field lines at each point • 2. The number of lines per unit area through a surface perpendicular to the lines is proportional to the strength of the electric field in a given region • Rules for drawing electric field lines: • -The lines for a group of point charges must begin on + charge and end on – charge • - The number of lines drawn leaving a + charge or ending a – charge is proportional to the magnitude of the charge • - No two field lines can cross each other • 6. Conductors in electrostatic equilibrium • When no net motion of chartge pccurs within a conductor, the conductor is in electrostatic equilibrum • 1. the electric field is zero inside of the material • 2. any excess charge on an isolated conductor resides entirely on its surface • 3. the electric field just outside a charge conductor is perpendicular to the conductor’s surface • 4. On an irregularly shaped conductor , the charge accumulates at sharp points, where the radius of curvature of the surface is smallest • 9. electric flux and Gauss’s Law • The electric flux ( the number of the field lines) is proportional to the product of the electric field and surface of the area • ΦE =EA • ΦE =EA cosθ • For a close surface, the flux line passing into the interior of the volume are negative, and those passing out of the interior of the volume are positive • • • • E= ke q|/r2 A= 4πr2 ΦE =EA=4π ke q Permittivity of free space: εo=1/4π ke =8.85x10-12C2/N m2 • Gauss’s Law: • ΦE =q/ εo • The electric flux through any closed surface is equal to the net charge inside the surface divided by the permittivity