Electric Potential Energy Ch. 25 Warmup 05 Electric fields produce forces; forces do work Since the electric fields are doing work, they must have potential.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 25: Electric Potential
Advertisements

Electric Potential Electric Energy Electric fields produce forces; forces do work Since the electric fields are doing work, they must have potential energy.
Electric Potential Energy Ch. 25 Warmup 05 Electric fields produce forces; forces do work Since the electric fields are doing work, they must have potential.
Goal: To understand electric potential and electric potential energy
Electric Energy and Circuits. Electrostatic Equilibrium No net motion of charge is occurring within a conductor Meets the following conditions ▫Electric.
Electrical Energy and Electric Potential AP Physics C.
Ch. 24 Electric Flux Gauss's Law
1 W03D2 Work, Potential Energy and Electric Potential Today’s Reading Assignment: Course Notes: Sections
§16.5 Motion of a Point Charge in a Uniform E-Field
Physics 152 Walker, Chapter 20 Electrostatic Potential Energy Electrostatic Potential.
Electric Potential Physics 2102 Gabriela González Physics 2102.
Ch 25.5 – Potential due to Continuous Distribution We have an expression for the E-potential of a point charge. Now, we want to find the E-potential due.
February 16, 2010 Potential Difference and Electric Potential.
Electric Potential II Physics 2415 Lecture 7 Michael Fowler, UVa.
Chapter 22 Electric Potential.
Topic 9.3 Electric Field, Potential, and Energy
With insulators, you can often use Gauss’ law in combination with the principle of superposition. (PoS is that the field from two sources is the vector.
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Physics 1502: Lecture 6 Today’s Agenda Announcements: –Lectures posted on: –HW assignments, solutions.
Ch 25 – Electric Potential
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 – Electricity & Magnetism b. Electric Potential.
Conductors are commonly used as places to store charge You can’t just “create” some positive charge somewhere, you have to have corresponding negative.
AP Physics: Electricity & Magnetism
1 Lecture 4 Electric Potential and/ Potential Energy Ch. 25 Review from Lecture 3 Cartoon - There is an electric energy associated with the position of.
-Electric Potential due to a Charged Conductor -The Millikan Oil Drop Experiment -Applications of Electrostatics AP Physics C Mrs. Coyle.
JIT HW 25-9 Conductors are commonly used as places to store charge You can’t just “create” some positive charge somewhere, you have to have corresponding.
Electric Energy and Capacitance
Chapter 25: Electric Potential
Electrical Energy and Capacitance
Gioko, A. (2007). Eds AHL Topic 9.3 Electric Field, potential and Energy.
Electric Potential and Electric Energy Chapter 17.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential Electrical Potential and Potential Difference When a test charge is placed in an electric field, it experiences a.
Chapter 25: Electric Potential Reading assignment: Chapter 25 HW (due Monday, Sept. 21): CQ2, 1, 2, 3, HW (due Thursday, Sept. 24): OQ2, OQ5,
1 My Chapter 17 Lecture Outline. 2 Chapter 17: Electric Potential Electric Potential Energy Electric Potential How are the E-field and Electric Potential.
1 Electric Potential Reading: Chapter 21 Chapter 21.
+ - q b b a b s r  a z r  50 kV Dirty air Clean air.
Chapter 22 Gauss’s Law Chapter 22 opener. Gauss’s law is an elegant relation between electric charge and electric field. It is more general than Coulomb’s.
Electric Energy and Capacitance
Weds., Jan. 29, 2014PHYS , Dr. Andrew Brandt 1 PHYS 1442 – Section 004 Lecture #5 Wednesday January 29, 2014 Dr. Andrew Brandt CH 17 Electric Potential.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley PowerPoint ® Lecture prepared by Richard Wolfson Slide Electric.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
Obtaining Electric Field from Electric Potential Assume, to start, that E has only an x component Similar statements would apply to the y and z.
Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
Electric Potential & Electric Potential Energy. Electric Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative (=“path independent”) force The electrostatic.
AP Physics C Montwood High School R. Casao
CHAPTER 25 : ELECTRIC POTENTIAL
Electrical Energy And Capacitance
Ch – 30 Potential and Field. Learning Objectives – Ch 30 To establish the relationship between and V. To learn more about the properties of a conductor.
Thin sheet of any charge distribution
Chapter 21 Electric Potential.
Electromagnetism Topic 11.1 Electrostatic Potential.
Lecture 4 Electric Potential/Energy Chp. 25 Cartoon - There is an electric energy associated with the position of a charge. Opening Demo - Warm-up problem.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential. Electrical Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative force, thus It is possible to define an electrical.
Electric Potential 2 q A C B r A B r path independence a a Rr VQ 4   r Q 4   R.
1 Lecture 4 Work, Electric Potential and Potential Energy Ch. 25 Topics Work, electric potential energy and electric potential Calculation of potential.
Electric Fields and Potential Chapter 33. Electric Fields Electric Field – a force field that fills the space around every electric charge or group of.
1 Chapter 25 Electric Potential. 2 Electrical Potential Energy When a test charge is placed in an electric field, it experiences a force F = q o E The.
Chapter 13 Electric Energy and Capacitance. Electric Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative force It is possible to define an electrical.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential.
Physics 30 Unit 2 Review Electrical Forces and Fields.
Electric Potential Energy
Electric Potential Energy
Equipotential Lines Are Topographical Maps
Conductors and Gauss’s Law
Topic 9.3 Electric Field, Potential, and Energy
Updates Test 1 pushed back to Tue 2/20/18
Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
Electric Potential Energy
Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
Presentation transcript:

Electric Potential Energy Ch. 25 Warmup 05

Electric fields produce forces; forces do work Since the electric fields are doing work, they must have potential energy The amount of work done is the change in the potential energy The force can be calculated from the charge and the electric field qE s Electric Potential Energy If the path or the electric field are not straight lines, we can get the change in energy by integration Divide it into little steps of size ds Add up all the little steps dsds

Warmup 05

Just like for electric forces, the electric potential energy is always proportional to the charge Just like for electric field, it makes sense to divide by the charge and get the electric potential V: The Electric Potential Using the latter formula is a little tricky It looks like it depends on which path you take It doesn’t, because of conservation of energy Electric potential is a scalar; it doesn’t have a direction Electric potential is so important, it has its own unit, the volt (V) A volt is a moderate amount of electric potential Electric field is normally given as volts/meter [V] = [E][s]=N ● m/C=J/C=volt=V

Calculating the Electric Potential To find the potential at a general point B: Pick a point A which we will assign potential 0 Pick a path from A to B It doesn’t matter which path, so pick the simplest possible one Perform the integration Example: Potential from a uniform electric field E: Choose r = 0 to have potential zero E V high V low Equipotential lines are perpendicular to E-field E-field lines point from high potential to low Positive charges have the most energy at high potential Negative charges have the most energy at low potential + -

Solve on Board

1.It is a scalar quantity – that makes it easier to calculate and work with 2.It is useful for problems involving conservation of energy Why Electric Potential is useful A proton initially at rest moves from an initial point with V = 0 to a point where V = V. How fast is the proton moving at the end? E V =0V = -1.5 V V Find the change in potential energy Since energy is conserved, this must be counter- balanced by a corresponding increase in kinetic energy

Warmup 05

Warmup 06

The Zero of the Potential We can only calculate the difference between the electric potential between two places This is because the zero of potential energy is arbitrary Compare U = mgh from gravity There are two arbitrary conventions used to set the zero point: Physicists: Set V = 0 at  Electrical Engineers: Set V = 0 on the Earth In circuit diagrams, we have a specific symbol to designate something has V = 0. V = 0 Anything attached here has V = 0

Potential From a Point Charge q Integrate from infinity to an arbitrary distance r For a point charge, the equipotential surfaces are spheres centered on the charge For multiple charges, or for continuous charges, add or integrate

Calculating Potentials is Straight-Forward qq q q Four charges q are each arranged symmetrically around a central point, each a distance a from that point. What is the potential at that point? A) 0B) 2k e q/a C) 4k e q/a D) None of the above

Getting Electric Field from Potential To go from electric field to potential, we integrate Can we go from potential to electric field? Consider a small motion in one dimension, say the z-direction For sufficiently small distances, this becomes a derivative This is a partial derivative – a derivative that treats x and y as constants while treating z as a variable If V = A(x 2 + y 2 - 2z 2 ), what is E z ? A) 2Ax + 2Ay – 4AzB) – 2Ax – 2Ay + 4Az C) – 4AzD) 4AzE) None of the above

Getting Electric Field from Potential (2) The other components can be found the same way: Fancy notation: Mathematically, it is useful to define the operator When this derivative operator is used this way (to make a vector out of a scalar) it is called a gradient “The electric field is minus the gradient of the potential” Yellow boxes mean a more mathematically sophisticated way to write the same thing. You don’t need to know or use it if you don’t want to.

Solve on Board

Equipotential Lines Are Like Topographical Maps Regions of high potential are like “mountains” For positive charges, they have a lot of energy there Regions of low potential are like “valleys” For positive charges, they have minimum energy there Electric fields point down the slope Closely spaced equipotential lines means big electric field

Understanding Equipotential Lines In the graph below, what type of charge is at X, and what at Y? A)Positive, both placesB) Positive at X, negative at Y C)Negative at X, positive at YD) Negative, both places potentials in kV XY Positive charges don’t want to climb the high mountain at Y Must be positive charge repelling them! Positive charges want to flow into low valley at X Must be negative charge attracting them! Electric fields are perpendicular to equipotential surfaces

Conductors and Batteries A battery or cell is a device that creates a fixed potential difference The circuit symbol for a battery looks like this: The long side is at higher potential It is labeled by the potential difference 1.5 V A conductor has zero electric field inside it Therefore, conductors always have constant potential A wire is a thin, flexible conductor: circuit diagram looks like this: A switch is a wire that can be connected or disconnected 1 V3 V 9 V X What is the potential at point X? A) 11 VB) -11 VC) +10 V D) – 10 VE) +8 VF) -8 V 0 V – 1 V + 8 V open switch closed switch

Conducting Spheres Given the charge q on a conducting sphere of radius R, what is the potential everywhere? Outside the sphere, the electric field is the same as for a point charge Therefore, so is the potential Inside, the potential is constant It must be continuous at the boundary q R

Sample Problem q2q2 Two widely separated conducting spheres, of radii R 1 = 1.00 cm and R 2 = 2.00 cm, each have 6.00 nC of charge put on them. What is their potential? They are then joined by an electrical wire. How much charge do they each end up with, and what is the final potential? q1q1 After connections, their potentials must be equal

Warmup

Electric Fields near conductors q2q2 q1q1 The potential for the two spheres ended up the same The electric fields at the surface are not the same The more curved the surface is, the higher the electric field is there Very strong electric field here A sharp point can cause charged particles to spontaneously be shed into air, even though we normally think of air as an insulator [ionize air] Called “Corona discharge”

The Lightning Rod Rain drops “rubbing” against the air can cause a separation of charge This produces an enormous electric field If electric field gets strong enough, it can cause breakdown of atmosphere Put a pointy rod on top of the building you want to protect Coronal discharge drains away the charge near the protected object Lightning hits somewhere else

The Van de Graff Generator Hollow conducting sphere, insulating belt, source of electric charge Source causes charge to move to the belt Belt rotates up inside sphere Charge jumps to conductor inside sphere Charge moves to outside of sphere Since all the charge is on the outside of the sphere, process can be repeated indefinitely. -