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Un importable: #91ADB18D,6 #95A4C6F7,6 #8686DCDC,4 #8280F5F7,6 #8133A715,6 Practice Exam 1 has been posted on course web site 1 hand graded question and 5 multiple choose questions
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Question 1 (Chap. 16) A solid metal ball carrying negative excess charge is placed near a uniformly charged plastic ball. -Q +Q metal plastic Which one of the following statements is true? The electric field inside both balls is zero. The electric field inside the metal ball is zero, but it is nonzero inside the plastic ball. The electric fields inside both objects are nonzero and are pointing toward each other. The electric field inside the plastic ball is zero, but it is nonzero inside the metal ball. Answer: B
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Question 2 (Chap. 16) Which one of these statements is false?
The electric field of a very long uniformly charged rod has a 1/r distance dependence. The electric field of a capacitor at a location outside the capacitor is very small compared to the field inside the capacitor. The fringe field of a capacitor at a location far away from the capacitor looks like an electric field of a point charge. The electric field of a uniformly charged thin ring at the center of the ring is zero. Answer: C It looks like a dipole field!
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Integration Divide shell into rings of charge, each delimited by the angle and the angle + Use polar coordinates (r, ,). Distance from center: d=(r-Rcos) Surface area of ring: R R Rsin Rcos d r
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A Solid Sphere of Uniformly Distributed Charge
What if charges are distributed throughout an object? Step 1: Cut up the charge into shells R For each spherical shell: outside: r E inside: dE = 0 Outside a solid sphere of charge: for r>R
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A Solid Sphere of Uniformly Distributed Charge
Inside a solid sphere of charge: R E r for r<R Why is E~r? On surface:
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Chapter 17 Electric Potential
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Exercise What is the electrical potential at a location 1Å from a proton? 1Å What is the potential energy of an electron at a location 1Å from a proton? Or in atomic units eV.
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Exercise 2Å 1Å What is the change in potential in going from 1Å to 2Å from the proton? What is the change in electric potential energy associated with moving an electron from 1Å to 2Å from the proton? Does the sign make sense?
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Potential Energy To understand the dynamics of moving objects consider: forces, momenta, work, energy Introduced the concept of electric field E to deal with forces Introduce electric potential – to consider work and energy Electric potential: electric potential energy per unit charge Practical importance: Reason about energy without having to worry about the details of some particular distribution of charges Batteries: provide fixed potential difference Predict possible pattern of E field
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Electric Potential Energy of Two Particles
Potential energy is associated with pairs of interacting objects Energy of the system: Energy of particle q1 Energy of particle q2 Interaction energy Uel q2 r12 q1 Esystem = E1+E2+Uel To change the energy of particles we have to perform work. E1 is a single particle energies = rest energy plus KE. Wext – work done by forces exerted by other objects Wint – work done by electric forces between q1 and q2 Q – thermal transfer of energy into the system
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Electric Potential Energy of Two Particles
q2 r12 Uel -Wint q1 if Total energy of the system can be changed (only) by external forces. Scalar product of 2 vectors! F here is the force between two charged particles, ie, the Coulomb force. Work done by internal forces:
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Electric Potential Energy of Two Particles
q2 q2 q1 q1 Uel > 0 for two like-sign charges (repulsion) Uel < 0 for two unlike-sign Charges (attraction)
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Electric and Gravitational Potential Energy
q1 q2 m1 m2
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Three Electric Charges
Interaction between q1 and q2 is independent of q3 There are three interacting pairs: q1 q2 q2 q3 q3 q1 U12 U23 U31 U= U12+ U23+ U31
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Multiple Electric Charges
q1 q3 q6 Each (i,j) pair interacts: potential energy Uij q2 q5 q4
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Electric Potential Electric potential electric potential energy per unit charge Alessandro Volta ( ) Units: J/C = V (Volt) Volts per meter = Newtons per Coulomb Electric potential – often called potential Electric potential difference – often called voltage
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V due to One Particle Single charge has no electric potential energy
q2 Single charge has potential to interact with other charge – it creates electric potential probe charge J/C, or Volts
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V due to Two Particles Electric potential is scalar:
Electric potential energy of the system: q3 If we add one more charge at position C:
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V at Infinity r, V=0 Positive charge Negative charge
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Question 1 What is the potential in the center of uniformly charged hollow sphere? ([k=1/(4pe0)]) k*Q/R2 k*Q/R k*Q/(4pR2) Not enough information Q R B
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Potential Inside a Uniformly Charged Hollow Sphere
=0
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