1 Introduction to Physics --- Modern Physics Textbook: Physics for Computer Science Students, by N. Garcia, A. Damask, and S. Schwarz, 2nd, 1998.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Electric Forces and Fields
Advertisements

Chapter 21. Electric Charge
Day 2 Electrical Charging & Coulomb’s Law. Objectives Charging by Conduction Charging by Induction Electroscopes Coulomb’s Law.
Chapter 23 Electric Fields
Electric Charges and Electric Fields
Electric Charge and Electric Field Electric Charge and Electric Field
Chapter Fourteen The Electric Field and the Electric Potential
Electrostatics Electrostatics The study of electrical charges that can be collected and held in one place. The study of electrical charges that can be.
Electric Forces and Fields Chapter 20. Charges and Forces Experiment 1 Nothing happens Nothing happens The objects are neutral The objects are neutral.
Nadiah Alenazi 1 Chapter 23 Electric Fields 23.1 Properties of Electric Charges 23.3 Coulomb ’ s Law 23.4 The Electric Field 23.6 Electric Field Lines.
Dr. Jie ZouPHY Chapter 23 Electric fields (cont.)
Electrostatics #3 The Electric Field
Lecture 9 Coulomb’s law Electric field. 3.3 Coulomb’s Law Coulomb’s law gives the force between two point charges: The force is along the line connecting.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Chapter 21 & 22 Electric Charge Coulomb’s Law This force of repulsion or attraction due to the charge properties of objects is called an electrostatic.
Scalar field: Temperatures The shown temperatures are samples of the field
Fall 2008Lecture 1-1Physics 231 Electric Charges, Forces, and Fields.
Electric Field You have learned that two charges will exert a force on each other even though they are not actually touching each other. This force is.
Bright Storm on Electric Field (Start to minute 6:18)
 The gravitational force between two masses, m1 & m2 is proportional to the product of the masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance.
Chapter 23 Electric Charge and Electric Fields What is a field? Why have them? What causes fields? Field TypeCaused By gravitymass electriccharge magneticmoving.
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Fields
Lecture 3 Electric Field Electric Field Lines Conductors in Electrostatic Equilibrium Millikan’s Oil-Drop Experiment Van de Graff Generator Electric Flux.
Biology – Premed Windsor University School of Medicine and Health Sciences J.C. Rowe Course Instructor.
Lecture 2 Properties of Electric Charges Insulators and Conductors Coulomb’s Law Electric Field Problem Solving Strategy.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 – Electricity & Magnetism (Electrostatics) a. Electric Charge, Electric Field & Gauss’ Law.
Electric Charge and Electric Field 16
Introduction to Electrostatics Unit 14, Presentation 1.
Electric Forces and Electric Fields
Chapter 19 Electric Forces and Electric Fields Electric Charges There are two kinds of electric charges Called positive and negative Negative.
Electric Forces and Fields: Coulomb’s Law
Electric Charge and Electric Field
ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM Phy 220 Chapter1: ELECTRIC FIELDS.
Chapter 16 Preview Objectives Properties of Electric Charge
Unit A: Electrostatics
Chapter 15 Electric Forces and Electric Fields Conceptual Quiz Questions.
Electric Field Physics Overview Properties of Electric Charges Charging Objects by Induction Coulomb’s Law The Electric Field Electric Field Lines.
General Physics II, Lec 3, By/ T.A. Eleyan 1 Lecture 3 The Electric Field.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Chapter 16 Section 1 Electric Charge Properties of Electric Charge.
Electric Charge and Coulomb’s Law
Physics.
The Millikan Experiment. 2 Questions Is there a smallest unit of electric charge for which all others are simple multiples? If so, what is its magnitude,
Applications of Coulomb’s Law Physics 12. Joke of the day/clip of the day:  Minute physics again! 
22-4 The Electric Field Due to a Point Charge
Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field
Foundation year General Physics PHYS 101 Lecture 9: Coulomb’s law and Electric field Instructor: Sujood Alazzam 2015/
Section 23.3: Coulomb’s Law
Day 3: Electric Fields. Objectives Static Electricity Electric Field Properties 1 & 2 –Dimensional Electric Field Calculations of Point Charges.
Coulomb’s Law p. 538 in your book. Charged objects & electrical force Two electrically charged objects exert a force on each other. Opposite charges ATTRACT.
Coulomb’s Law Pg
Chapter 25 Electric Potential. Electrical Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative force, thus It is possible to define an electrical.
Halliday/Resnick/Walker Fundamentals of Physics
Chapter 16 Electric Charge and Electric Field. Units of Chapter 16 Static Electricity; Electric Charge and Its Conservation Electric Charge in the Atom.
Static Electricity, Electric Forces, Electric Fields.
Electric Fields and Electrostatics. A field around a point charge diverges in a regular fashion A uniform field exists between two charged plates where.
Electricity Coulomb’s Law Chapter 5. Coulomb’s Law Magic? (a)The two glass rods were each rubbed with a silk cloth and one was suspended by thread. When.
Charles Allison © 2000 Chapter 21, Electric Charge, and electric Field.
Chapter 23 Electric Fields.
Static Electricity, Electric Forces, Electric Fields.
P202c22: 1 Chapter 22: Electric Charge and Electric Field Electric Charge Ancient Greeks ~ 600 BC Static electicity: electric charge via friction (Attempted)
There are only two charges, positive and negative.
Electricity Coulomb’s Law Chapter 5. Electricity Electricity is a type of energy that can build up in one place or flow from one place to another. When.
Electrostatics.
COULOMB’S LAW Coulomb’s Law – charges exert forces on each other and have been shown to be directly proportional to the magnitude of the charge and inversely.
Chapter 21, Electric Charge, and electric Field
Coulomb’s Law Pg
Section 23.3: Coulomb’s Law
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Chapter 21, Electric Charge, and electric Field
Charge & Coulomb’s Law
Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Physics --- Modern Physics Textbook: Physics for Computer Science Students, by N. Garcia, A. Damask, and S. Schwarz, 2nd, 1998.

2 Chapter Thirteen: Electrostatics The interaction of charges at rest is called electrostatics. Superposition principle: The behavior of multiple charges on one another is a simple sum of the one-to-one interactions (pairwise).

3 Charges There are two different types of charges called positive and negative. Metals have been known as electrical conductors and nonmetals as insulators.

4 Coulomb's Law Attraction and repulsion of charges: see Fig Coulomb's experiments concerning the forces between charges :see Fig The force diagram for q 2 is shown in Fig. 13-3b and the system is in the equilibrium state. Thus,

5

6

7 Coulomb's law: where the sign of q 1 and q 2 may be either plus or minus, and r is the distance between q 1 and q 2. In the SI system the constant in Coulomb's law is taken as

8 The symbol C stands for Coulomb and is the unit of charge. The charge of the electron in coulombs is Coulomb's law: The direction of the force that q 1 exerts on q 2 is along the line joining the two charges, pointing away from q 1 if the force is repulsive or toward q 1 if the force is attractive.

9 Example 13-1 Two pith balls of mass 0.1g each are suspended on 50-cm threads. They are given equal charges and assume a position in which each makes an angle of with vertical, as in Fig. 13-4a. What is the charge on each?

10

11 Sol The vector diagram of the forces on the right-hand ball is shown in Fig. 13-4b, where F is the coulombic force of repulsion between the two charged pith balls.

12 Substituting this value of T in the equation for F, we have

13 Using Coulomb's law, Because q 1 = q 2 and substituting for F and r we have

14 Charge of an Electron In the years 1909 through 1913 R. Millikan measured the charge on an electron by the system shown in Fig With a spray he introduced fine oil drops between two parallel metal plates and observed the motion of a single drop through a telescope. He found the drops usually acquired a negative charge.

15

16 He also found that the smallest charge that was ever acquired by the drop had a magnitude of C and that larger charges were always integral multiples of this quantity.

17 Superposition Principle If one selects a given charge in a group and asks for the total force on it, this force would be the resultant of the individual vector forces on it from each of the charges. This is called the superposition principle of charges.

18 Example 13-2 Three charges are arranged in a triangle as shown in Fig. 13-6a. What is the direction and the magnitude of the resultant force on the C charge?

19

20 Sol at above the positive x axis. at below the positive x axis.

21 We now use the vector diagram of these two forces and find the resultant by the component method of Chapter 2. We have

22 Homework 13.4, 13.9, 13.10, 13.11, 13.12, 13.13,