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Chapter 32 Electrostatics
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ELECTRICITY is EVERYWHERE Lightening Static electricity(when you “shock” someone by touching them) Atoms are held together in molecules
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Electrostatics Electricity(electric charges) at rest “…static's” means something is at rest
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32.1 Electrical forces and charges Electrical forces-a force one electric charge exerts on another charges may be positive (+) or negative(-)
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32.1 Electrical Forces and Charges If both are the same they repel each other If charges are different, they are attracted to each other.
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32.1 Electrical Forces and Charges Charge-the property to which the mutual repulsion or mutual attraction of electrons and protons is attributed Electrons are – Protons are +
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32.2 Conservation of Charge “An object that has an unequal number of electrons and protons is electrically charged…
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32.2 Conservation of Charge …if it has more electrons than protons, the object is negatively charged…
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32.2 Conservation of Charge …if it has fewer electrons than protons, it is positively charged.”
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32.3 Coulomb’s Law Charles Coulomb (1736- 1806) Coulomb-SI unit for charge abbreviation:C C=charge of electrons(6.25 billion billion electrons) equivalent to the charge that runs through a 100- watt bulb
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32.3 Coulomb’s law “for charged particles or objects that are small compared to the distance between them…
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32.3 Coulomb’s law …(1) the force between the charges varies directly as the product of the charges and(2) inversely as the square of the distance between them.”
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32.3 Coulomb’s law F= k x q 1 x q 2 d 2 F= the force between charges q 1 & q 2 =quantity of charge d 2 =distance between particles k=9,000,000,000(N x m 2 )/C 2
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32.4 Conductors and Insulators Conductor- a material usually a metal, through which an electric charge can flow. -Electrons are not anchored on the nucleus, but are allowed to roam in the material
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32.4 Conductors and Insulators Insulators- a material that is poor conductor of electricity -the electrons are anchored to the nucleus and not free to roam
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32.4 Conductors and Insulators Semiconductors- material that can be made to behave as either a conductor or an insulator of electricity
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32.4 Conductors and Insulators Superconductor- materials that have zero resistance to the flow of charge -(infinite conductivity)
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32.5 Charging by friction and Contact (OH) -ex: static electricity after you rub your feet against the floor
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32.6 Charging by induction (OH 76, 77) Induced-term applied to electric charge that has been redistributed on an object because of a charged object nearby
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32.6 Charging by Induction 1. Induction-the charging of an object without direct contact aka:electromagnetic induction
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32.7 Charge Polarization Electrically polarized- term applied to an atom or molecule in which charges are aligned so that one side is slightly more positive or negative than the opposite side
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32.7 Charge Polarization - Occurs in insulators that are in the presence of a charged object
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