Chapter 22 (1) .Elect
Chapter 22 (1) .Elect
Chapter 22 (1) .Elect
22.1. What is Physics? 22.2. The Electric Field 22.3. Electric Field Lines 22.4. The Electric Field Due to a Point Charge 22.5. The Electric Field Due to an Electric Dipole 22.6. The Electric Field Due to a Line of Charge 22.7. The Electric Field Due to a Charged Disk 22.8. A Point Charge in an Electric Field 22.9. A Dipole in an Electric Field
The electric field is a vector, and its direction is the same as the direction of the force F on a positive test charge SI Unit of Electric Field: newton per coulomb (N/C)
It is the surrounding charges that create an electric field at a given point. Any charge q placed at the point with the electric field E will experiences a force, F=qE. For a positive charge, the force points in the same direction as the electric field; for a negative charge, the force points in the opposite direction as the electric field. At a particular point in space, each of the surrounding charges contributes to the net electric field that exists there
There is an isolated point charge of q=+15 C in a vacuum. Using a test charge of q0=+0.80 C, determine the electric field at point P, which is 0.20 m away.
(2) If q is positive, then E is directed away from q, as in Figure b. On the other hand, if q is negative, then E is directed toward q.
At any point, the tangent direction of the electric line is the direction of electric field. The density of the electric field lines provides information about the magnitude of the field. The lines are closer together where the electric field is stronger, the lines are closer together. The lines are more spread out where the electric field is weaker. The electric field lines always begin on a positive charge and end on a negative charge and do not start or stop in midspace.
Electric Dipole
two charged particles of magnitude q but of opposite sign, separated by a distance d. We call this configuration an electric dipole The product qd, which involves the two intrinsic properties q and d of the dipole, is the magnitude p of a vector quantity known as the electric dipole moment of the dipole. The direction of P is taken to be from the negative to the positive end of the dipole
Shielding continue
(2). At equilibrium under electrostatic conditions, the electric field is zero at any point within a conducting material. (3). The electric field just outside the surface of a conductor is perpendicular to the surface at equilibrium under electrostatic conditions
Sample Problem
A neutral water molecule H2O in its vapor state has an electric dipole moment of magnitude 6.2x10-30 c.m. (a) How far apart are the molecule's centers of positive and negative charge? (b) If the molecule is placed in an electric field of 1.5x104N/c , what maximum torque can the field exert on it? (Such a field can easily be set up in the laboratory.) (c) How much work must an external agent do to rotate this molecule by 180o in this field, starting from its fully aligned position, for which =0?
Conceptual Questions
(1) A proton and an electron are held in place on the x axis. The proton is at x=d, while the electron is at x=+d. They are released simultaneously, and the only force that affects their motions is the electrostatic force of attraction that each applies to the other. Which particle reaches the origin first? Give your reasoning. On a thin, nonconducting rod, positive charges are spread evenly, so that there is the same amount of charge per unit length at every point. On another identical rod, positive charges are spread evenly over only the left half, and the same amount of negative charges are spread evenly over the right half. For each rod, deduce the direction of the electric field at a point that is located directly above the midpoint of the rod. Give your reasoning. There is an electric field at point P. A very small charge is placed at this point and experiences a force. Another very small charge is then placed at this point and experiences a force that differs in both magnitude and direction from that experienced by the first charge. How can these two different forces result from the single electric field that exists at point P?
(2)
(3)
(4) Drawings I and II show two examples of electric field lines. Decide which of the following statements are true and which are false, defending your choice in each case. (a) In both I and II the electric field is the same everywhere. (b) As you move from left to right in each case, the electric field becomes stronger. (c) The electric field in I is the same everywhere but becomes stronger in II as you move from left to right. (d) The electric fields in both I and II could be created by negative charges located somewhere on the left and positive charges somewhere on the right. (e) Both I and II arise from a single positive point charge located somewhere on the left.
(5) A positively charged particle is moving horizontally when it enters the region between the plates of a capacitor, as the drawing illustrates. (a) Draw the trajectory that the particle follows in moving through the capacitor. (b) When the particle is within the capacitor, which of the following four vectors, if any, are parallel to the electric field inside the capacitor: the particles displacement, its velocity, its linear momentum, its acceleration? For each vector explain why the vector is, or is not, parallel to the electric field of the capacitor.