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AP Physics III.A Electrostatics

AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

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Page 1: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

AP Physics III.A

Electrostatics

Page 2: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.1 Origin of Electricity

Page 3: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

The Fundamental Charge (Robert Millikan and his oil drop

experiment)

Page 4: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. How many electrons are in two Coulombs of negative charge?

Page 5: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.2 Charged Objects and Electric Force

Page 6: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Law of Conservation of Charge – during any one process, net

electrical charge of an isolated system remains constant.

Page 7: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Two identical isolated conducting spheres, one with charge -6 μC and another with net charge +2 μC are allowed to touch. If the two spheres have the same net charge after touching, what is the net charge on each sphere?

Page 8: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Attractions and repulsions

Page 9: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.3 Conductors and Insulators

Page 10: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.4 Charging by Induction and Conduction (also known as, “I

wish I had a decent electroscope”)

Page 11: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Charging by Conduction

Page 12: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Charging by Induction

Page 13: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Induced charge on an insulator

Page 14: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.5 (Charles De) Coulomb’s Law

Page 15: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

“Hmm, this looks like something I’ve seen before”

Page 16: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. An electron “orbits” the proton of a hydrogen atom at an average distance of 0.53 EE 10-10 m. What is the force that theproton exerts on the electron? What is the velocity of the electronfor a circular orbit?

Page 17: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Two charges exert electrical force F on each other. If the magnitude of each charge is doubled and the distance between them is halved, what is the force F′ on each charge in terms of F?

Page 18: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Electric forces and vectors

Page 19: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Three Charges in a Line

Page 20: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Three Charges in a Plane

Page 21: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

p. 552: 3-5, 7, 11, 15, 19, 21, 23, 79B7

4. 3.4 EE -17 kg, mA > mB

79B7

a) FBD

b) k

mglq

tansin2

Page 22: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.6 Electric Field

Page 23: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

A mass in a gravitational field

Page 24: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Charges experience an electrostatic force due to the presence of other

charges

Page 25: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Force per Coulomb is the definition of an electric field

(“show me the formula”)

Page 26: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

An electric field is a vector that has a direction that the force exerts

on a positive test charge.

Page 27: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Some examples

Page 28: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Find the electric force on a proton placed in an electric fieldof 2.0 EE 4 N/C that is directed along the positive x-axis.

Page 29: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Electric fields are vectors. The net electric field at a point in space can be determined by

considering the contributions of each charged object and adding

them together as vectors.

Page 30: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Electric field produced by a point charge

Page 31: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Electric Field Between Two Point Charges. Two point chargesare separated by a distance of 0.100 m. One has a charge of –25.0μC and the other 50.0 μC . a) What is the magnitude and directionof the electric field at point P between them 0.020 m from the negative charge? b) If an electron is placed at rest at P, what isthe magnitude and direction of its initial acceleration?

Page 32: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Symmetry and the electric field.

Page 33: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

18.7 Electric Field Lines

Page 34: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Field lines around positive and negative charges

Page 35: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Field lines between plates of a capacitor.

Page 36: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Field lines between two dipoles

Page 37: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Field lines between two identical charges

Page 38: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

p. 553: 25, 29, 31, 35-37; 81B3

36. a) 182 N/C b) 312 N/C

81B3

a) FBD

b) E = 5800 N/C, FT = 0.058 N

c) drawing

Page 39: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

19.1 Electric Potential Energy

Page 40: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Work done on a charge in a uniform electric field

Page 41: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Let’s clarify but not overemphasize the signs

Page 42: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

19.2 Electric Potential Difference

Page 43: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Let’s look at “gravitational potential” first

Page 44: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

OK, now electric potential

Page 45: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

So change in electric potential is . . .

Page 46: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Electric potential decreases or increases not because the field exerts

any more or less force (the field is uniform – like gravity near the

Earth’s surface). V changes because of distance. A charge released in the

field, traveling a greater distance converts more of its Ue to K (like dropping an object from a greater

height).

Page 47: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Everyday examples

Page 48: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Potential (and therefore potential difference) is scalar (this will

simplify some things).

Page 49: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Summary

• Electric potential energy – energy a charge has because of its potential in an electric field (so far the field is uniform)

• Electric potential – electric potential energy per unit charge

• Potential difference – change in electric potential

Page 50: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Another formula and an hilarious story about twin boll weevils.

Page 51: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Muy importante – the displacement of the charge is in

the direction of the electric field.

Page 52: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. In the figure shown, the work done on a 2.0 µ C charge by the electric field from A to B is 5.0 EE -5 J. What is the change in electric potential energy and the potential difference?

A · B ·

Page 53: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Worth noting: a positive charge accelerates from a higher potential to lower potential. A negative charge accelerates from lower potential to

higher potentials.

Page 54: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Conservation of Energy – yep, here it is again with electrical potential energy in the picture

Page 55: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. A proton is released in a uniform electric field with a magnitude of 8.0 EE 4 V/m directed along the positive x-axis. The proton undergoes a displacement of 0.50 m in the direction of the field. a) Find the potential difference. b) Find the change in electrical potential energy c) Find the speed if the proton starts from rest.

Page 56: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

The electron-volt – the change in electrical potential energy as an

electron moves through a potential difference of one volt

Page 57: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. A particle with mass of 1.8 EE -5 kg and a charge of 3.0 EE -5 C is released from rest at point A and accelerates horizontally to point B. The only force on the particle is the force from the electric field and the electric potential at A is 25 V greater than the potential at B. What is the velocity of the particle at B?

Page 58: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

p. 581: 4, 6; p. 150: 36

4. a) 2.00 EE -14 J b) 2.00 EE -14 J

6. a) 1500 V b) B is higher potential

36. 2700 m

Page 59: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

19.2 Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge

Page 60: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Graphically – potential from a positive charge is positive and decreases to zero at infinity.

Page 61: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Potential from a negative charge is negative and increases towards zero

at infinity.

Page 62: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Electric Potential for a Pair of Point Charges

Page 63: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. A 5.0 µC charge is at the origin and a -2.0 µC charge is on the x-axis at (3.0, 0) m. a) If the electric potential is zero at infinity, find the total electric potential due to the charges at P, with coordinates (0, 4.0) m. b) How much work is required to bring a third charge of 4.0 µC from infinity to P?

Page 64: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. How many places are there on the line below where the potential is zero? Where is (are) these locations?

2q -q

Page 65: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

Ex. Potential energy for a group of charges

Page 66: AP Physics III.A Electrostatics. 18.1 Origin of Electricity

p. 582: 11-17; 87B2, 89B2

12. 2.4 (let VA = VB)

14. 45 V

16. 0.37 m (let U2 = 2U1)

87B2

a) 9 EE 4 V

b) 9 EE -2 V

c) 0.30 N

d) 8.0 EE 5 N/C (right)

e) 6 m/s (use con. of mom. and con. of E)

89B2

a) -2 microC

b) 3.6 N (right)

c) -0.72 J

d) 0.16 m e) ?