chapter 32 electrostatics electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

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Chapter 32 Electrostatics

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Page 1: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Chapter 32Electrostatics

Page 2: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Electrostatics:the study of electrical charges at

rest

Page 3: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Ion:an atom or molecule with a

charge.

Page 4: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

A charged object is created by the separation of charges: 1. an atom is electrically

neutral; it has the same number of protons (positive charges) as

it does electrons (negative charges)

Page 5: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

A charged object is created by the separation of charges:

2. objects are charged by adding or removing electrons

Page 6: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

A charged object is created by the separation of charges:

3. a positive charge occurs when there are fewer electrons

than protons(Cation)

Page 7: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

A charged object is created by the separation of charges:

4. a negative charge occurs when there are more electrons

than protons(Anion)

Page 8: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 9: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Law of Conservation of Electric Charge :

The net amount of electric charge produced in any process is zero. If one region or object

acquires a positive charge, then an equal amount of negative

charge will be found in neighboring regions or objects.

Page 10: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

During the last century, it became clear that electricity begins inside the atom itself

Page 11: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

In a simplified view, the postivively charged nucleus

(containing postively charged protons) of the atom is

surrounded by negatively charged electrons

Page 12: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 13: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Electrons move from place to place or as we sometimes say

shell to shell.They can even leave all

together and go to another atom or molecule.

Page 14: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

When objects are charged by rubbing, the electrons (which

are free to move) are transferred from one object to

another

Page 15: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 16: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Outer electrons are the ones that can move from object to

object. These are called valance electrons.

Page 17: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

If you rub a rubber rod with a fur cloth then the electrons leave the fur cloth and go into the

rubber rod.What is the charge of the rod?

-What is the charge of the cloth?

+

Page 18: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Rub a glass rod with silk and the electrons go from the rod

into the silk.What is the charge of the glass

rod?(+)

What is the charge of the silk?(-)

Page 19: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Coulomb’s Lawdescribes the electrostatic force

between two charged objects

(and is a lot like Newton’s law of gravitation)

Page 20: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Charles Coulomb used a torsion balance in the 1780's to investigate electrical forces. He found that if the

charge is doubled on a charged object, the electric force it exerts on another charged object is also doubled. He

found that if the distance between two charged objects was allowed to

increase, the electric force between them decreased with the square of the

distance between them.

Page 21: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

-where k is Coulomb’s constant, or

k = 9 x 109 Nm2 /C2 (approximate value) -q is the magnitude of each charge in coulombs -d is the distance of separation in meters -F is the electrostatic force in Newtons. It is

either attractive or repulsive.

Page 22: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

SI unit of charge is the Coulomb abbreviated “C”

1 C = 6.24 x 1018 electrons

Page 23: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Coulomb's law calculates the magnitude of the electric force between two charged objects, when the charges are known. The direction of the force is

always along a line joining the two objects. If the two objects have the

same sign, the force on either object is directed away from each other. If the two objects have opposite signs, the

force on either object is directed toward each other.

Page 24: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Similarities between Coulomb's law and the law of universal gravitation:Both are inverse square laws-the force is proportional to the inverse

square of the distance. Both are proportional to the product of a property of each body-mass for

gravity and charge for electricity

Page 25: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

The greatest difference between Newton’s and Coulomb’s laws is

that Newton’s law deals with attraction whereas Coulomb’s

deals with attraction and repulsion.

Page 26: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Conductors are materials which permit electrons to flow freely from atom to atom and

molecule to molecule.

Page 27: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Insulators are materials which impede the free flow of

electrons from atom to atom and molecule to molecule.

Page 28: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 29: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Semiconductors can be made to behave as conductors or insulators. Silicon is a great

semiconductor.

Page 30: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 31: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Superconductors:At temperatures near absolute

zero certain metals acquire infinite conductivity. Once

electrical current is established in a superconductor the

electrons flow indefinitely.

Page 32: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 33: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Charge by Friction:when electrons are transferred by friction from one object to

another. Rubbing feet on floor.

Page 34: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 35: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Charge by contact:when electrons are transferred from one object to another by direct contact without rubbing.

(Touch a charged rod to a neutral rod it will transfer the charge to the neutral rod.)

Page 36: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest
Page 37: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Induction:charging an object without

touching the object.

Page 38: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Charge by induction happens in thunderstorms. Cloud bottoms are negatively charged and the

Earth’s surface is positive.

Page 39: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

Static buildup in the clouds

Page 40: Chapter 32 Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electrical charges at rest

The release of the charge