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Published byDennis Jefferson Modified over 9 years ago
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22-1 Charges and Forces: A closer look: Why fields? To explain “ action at a distance ” !! Chapter 22: Electric Fields Introduction: What do we really want to get out of chapter 23? Review: vectors!
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22-2 The Electric Field ( E ): To find the field (E) at a location (P) due to a charge q, calculate: E = F/q 0 where q 0 is a “ test charge ” places at P. The units of E is N/C. Typical fields: At hydrogen nucleus surface: 10 11 N/C At surface of photocopier drum: 10 5 N/C Near a charged comb: 10 3 N/C In copper wire circuits: 10 -2 N/C
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22-3 Electric Field Lines: Are merely to visualize patterns in electric fields. 1- The direction of the tangent to the field lines at any point is the direction of E at that point. 2- The number of lines per unit area is proportional to the magnitude of E.
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Example: 1- A single (positive or negative) point charge. 2- A charged conducting sphere. 3- Two (like or unlike) point charges. 4- A charged slab (or sheet) [finite or infinite] 5- A charged line (or cylinder) [short or long] Note that electric field lines originate at positive charges (or at infinity) and terminate at negative charges (or at infinity).
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No two fields lines can cross or touch. Field lines are not material objects. Although the lines are drawn as discrete, the field itself is continuous.
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22-4 Electric Field Due to a Point Charge: For a charge q: |F| = k |q| |q 0 |/r 2 Therefore, E = k |q|/r 2 point away from q if q is positive E = k |q|/r 2 point toward q if q is negative If there are many charges q 1, q 2, q 3, …, q n : Use “ superposition ” : the net field is the vector sum of the fields due to each of the n charges.
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Away from q j if q j is positive; toward q j if q j is negative! E = F/q 0 =E 1 + E 2 + … + E n Check point 1:
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If we want to find the electric field due to a dipole at a point which is a distance z away from the midpoint between the two dipole charges, then: E dipole = E + + E - p is called the electric dipole moment; its magnitude is: q · d, where d is the distance between the two charges. 22-5 E Due to an Electric Dipole: p is a vector that points from the negative charge to the positive charge.
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What are the SI units of p? Interaction: prove it!! Along the dipole axis, when z >> d, one finds that: E dipole = 2k p/z 3 and is directed along the dipole axis. Note that, for large distances, E dipole ~ p (not q alone or d alone); also E ~ 1/r 3 not 1/r 2 !!
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22-8 A point charge in E: When a point charge q is places in a field E, the force experienced by this charge is: F = q E Applications: (see H&R pg. 533) 1- Millikan oil-drop experiment: q = n e 2- Ink-jet printing 3- Volcanic lightning
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Solve sample problem 23.4 (pg. 534)
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22-9 A dipole in in E: H 2 O ~ an electric dipole … why? For a uniform E: F net = 0 But the torque ( ): = p x E The torque tends to rotate p into the direction of E!!
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What is the potential energy in a dipole field? The change in potential energy is the negative of the work done by field on the dipole. Compare with gravitational potential energy Taking r = 90 o, U( r ) = 0 Therefore: U( ) = - p E cos = - p · E
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Therefore, the work done by the field on the dipole is: W = - U = U i – U f However, the applied work by an external agent is: W agent = U f – U i Solve problem:
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