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Physics 4 – Jan 17, 2017 Do Now – Review of vector addition:

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1 Physics 4 – Jan 17, 2017 Do Now – Review of vector addition:
Add 50 35 and 

2 Objectives/Agenda/Assignment
5.1 Electrostatics Assignment: p205 #1-14 Agenda: About Charge Coulomb’s Law Electric Field Diagrams Current Electron drift Potential difference

3 About Charge Charge is a fundamental quantity of nature and is a feature of all matter because matter consists of electrons and protons. 1) Charge comes in two varieties: positive and negative (arbitrary names) Electrons are negative, protons are positive. Neutral matter has approximately equal numbers of electrons and protons

4 About Charge 2) Charge is quantized. The charge of one electron is the smallest amount of charge you can have. All charges are some multiple of 1.6 x C. Charge is measured in Coulombs and given the symbol Q or q. 3) Charge is conserved. Charge is neither created nor destroyed Touching two objects together instantly equilibrates and evenly distributes their charges.

5 Coulomb’s Law Two charges will exert a force on one another.
Opposite charges attract Same charges repel Force is proportional to both charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the two charges. Proportionality constant is k = 9.0 x 109 N m2/C2 (To make the units work) k = 1/4𝝅𝝐o O = permittivity of vacuum = 8.85 x C2/Nm2 𝑭=𝒌 𝑸 𝟏 𝑸 𝟐 𝒓 𝟐 A force just like any other. Added just like any other.

6 Electric Field Diagrams
Mechanism for how charges act over a distance: Electric field. Direction of electric field is in the same direction as the force on a small positive test charge q+ Strength indicated by arrow length Direction: tail of field lines begin at + and radiate outward. Direction: Arrow heads point toward a – charge and radiate inward. Similar to gravitational field

7 Electric field formulas
F = qE As a result, there is a formula of electric field based on Coulomb’s Law. 𝑬=𝒌 𝑸 𝒓 𝟐 Can calculate electric field knowing the force and test charge or the magnitude of the electric field present at a given distance from an isolated charge.

8 Current Q = It Moving charges within a medium creates a current.
Current is measured as a rate of transfer of charge per time. Symbol: I Unit: Ampere, A 1 A = 1 C/s (SI base unit) 1) Positive charge moves in the opposite direction as electrons 2) A charge can move faster than actual matter can move. 3) The only thing that physically moves to transfer charge is the electron. Positive charge is the absence of an electron. Q = It

9 Electron Drift So how fast do the electrons actually move? = Electron drift, v Distance across a given segment of wire = vt The volume of the cross section is the cross sectional area A times the length or Avt If there are n electrons in a given volume (#electrons/m3), the number of electrons in the volume is nAvt Q is created by n electrons, each with q charge, so Q = nqAvt Current is the charge that passes in a given time I = Q/t I = nqAvt/t So I = nqAv I = current, n = number of e/m3 v = electron drift speed and A is the cross sectional area of the wire

10 Electron Drift calculation
How fast are electrons moving in a copper wire with a diameter of 1.5 mm when a current of A is applied? Density of copper is 8.96 g/cm3. (Assume about 10 electrons per copper atom are available for metallic bonding.) Compare this to the speed of charge on the wire?

11 Electric Potential Energy
The electric force is a conservative force so there is a potential energy that corresponds to the opposite of the work done by the conservative force. The state for 0 electrical potential energy is if a test charge is infinitely far away from an isolated positive charge. As the charge moves closer to the charge, it is more and more repelled and the electric force is doing negative work. The charge therefore is experiencing a positive potential energy change. Positive charges are at a high potential energy The work done by the electric force is equal to r times the force or W=−𝒌 𝑸𝒒 𝒓 The potential energy is the U =𝒌 𝑸𝒒 𝒓

12 Electric potential The potential energy per unit charge is known as the electric potential or V =𝒌 𝑸 𝒓 and is measured in volts. 1 V = 1 J/C W = QV Electric potential is to electrical potential energy as height is to gravitational potential energy. The test charge is akin to the mass.

13 Electric potential Positive charges create a relative high potential state. Negative charges create a relative low potential state. Moving from a lower to a high potential is a positive voltage. Just like height, the word potential can refer to both a fixed state and a difference in states. Wherever there is an electric field there will be a potential difference.

14 The electron Volt (eV) Because electrons are so small, the associated energies are very small, much smaller than a J. 1 eV is the energy of one electron charge over 1 volt 1 eV = (1.6 x C) (1 J/C) 1 eV = 1.6 x J If you get a very small amount of energy, convert to eV. Or you may be given information in eV.

15 Exit slip and homework Exit Slip – What is the electrostatic force (magnitude and direction) between a positive charge of 1.3 x 10-3 C and a negative charge of 6.2 x 10-3 C when they are separated by a distance of 15.0 cm? What’s due? (homework for a homework check next class) P205 # 1-14 What’s next? (What to read to prepare for the next class) Read 5.2 p


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