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CHAPTER 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field - Summary

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CHAPTER 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field -- Summary

There are two kinds of electric charge, positive and negative. These designations are to be taken
algebraically—that is, any charge is plus or minus so many coulombs (C), in SI units.

Electric charge is conserved: if a certain amount of one type of charge is produced in a process, an equal
amount of the opposite type is also produced; thus the net charge produced is zero.

According to atomic theory, electricity originates in the atom, each consisting of a positively charged
nucleus surrounded by negatively charged electrons. Each electron has a charge

e = 1.60 x 10-19 C

Electric conductors are those materials in which many electrons are relatively free to move, whereas
electric insulators are those in which very few electrons are free to move.

An object is negatively charged when it has an excess of electrons, and positively charged when it has
less than its normal amount of electrons. The charge on any object is thus a whole number times +e or -e
That is, charge is quantized.

An object can become charged by rubbing (in which electrons are transferred from one material to
another), by conduction (which is transfer of charge from one charged object to another by touching), or
by induction (the separation of charge within an object because of the close approach of another charged
object but without touching).

Electric charges exert a force on each other. If two charges are of opposite types, one positive and one
negative, they each exert an attractive force on the other. If the two charges are the same type, each repels
the other.

The magnitude of the force one point charge exerts on another is proportional to the product of their
charges, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them:

F = k (Q1 Q2)/r2 = (1/4o) (Q1 Q2)/r2

this is Coulomb’s law. In SI units, k is often written as 1/4o

We think of an electric field as existing in space around any charge or group of charges. The force on
another charged object is then said to be due to the electric field present at its location.

The electric field, E, at any point in space due to one or more charges, is defined as the force per unit
charge that would act on a positive test charge q placed at that point:

 F
E . (21–3)
q

The magnitude of the electric field a distance r from a point charge Q is


Q
Ek . (21–4a)
r2

The total electric field at a point in space is equal to the vector sum of the individual fields due to
each contributing charge (principle of superposition).

Electric fields are represented by electric field lines that start on positive charges and end on negative
charges. Their direction indicates the direction the force would be on a tiny positive test charge placed at
each point. The lines can be drawn so that the number per unit area is proportional to the magnitude of E.

The static electric field inside a conductor is zero, and the electric field lines just outside a charged
conductor are perpendicular to its surface.

An electric dipole is a combination of two equal but opposite charges, +Q and -Q separated by a
distance l. The dipole moment is p = Ql. A dipole placed in a uniform electric field feels no net force but
 
does feel a net torque (unless p is parallel to E ). The electric field produced by a dipole decreases as the
 
third power of the distance r from the dipole E ~ 1/r 3 for r large compared to l.

CHAPTER 22 Gauss’s Law - Summary



The electric flux passing through a flat area A for a uniform electric field E is

E = E • d A (22–1b)

If the field is not uniform, the flux is determined from the integral

E = ∫ E • dA (22–2)
 
The direction of the vector A or d A is chosen to be perpendicular to the surface whose area is A or dA,
and points outward from an enclosed surface. The flux through a surface is proportional to the number of
field lines passing through it.

Gauss’s law states that the net flux passing through any closed surface is equal to the net charge Qencl
enclosed by the surface divided by o

∫ E • dA = Qencl/o (22–4)

Gauss’s law can in principle be used to determine the electric field due to a given charge distribution, but
its usefulness is mainly limited to a small number of cases, usually where the charge distribution displays
much symmetry. The real importance of Gauss’s law is that it is a more general and elegant statement
(than Coulomb’s law) for the relation between electric charge and electric field. It is one of the basic
equations of electromagnetism.
CHAPTER 23 Electric Potential - Summary

Electric potential is defined as electric potential energy per unit charge. That is, the electric potential
difference between any two points in space is defined as the difference in potential energy of a test
charge q placed at those two points, divided by the charge q:

Vba = (Ub – Ua)/q (23–2b)

Potential difference is measured in volts 1 V  1 J/C  and is sometimes referred to as voltage.

The change in potential energy of a charge q when it moves through a potential difference Vba is

U = qVba (23–3)

The potential difference Vba between two points, a and b, is given by the relation

Vba = Vb – Va = - ∫ E • dA (23–4a)

Thus Vba can be found in any region where E is known. If the electric field is uniform, the integral is
easy: Vba = - Ed where d is the distance (parallel to the field lines) between the two points.

An equipotential line or surface is all at the same potential, and is perpendicular to the electric field at
all points.

The electric potential due to a single point charge Q, relative to zero potential at infinity, is given by

V = 1/(4o) Q/r (23–5)

The potential due to any charge distribution can be obtained by summing (or integrating) over the
potentials for all the charges.

The potential due to an electric dipole drops off as 1/r 2 . The dipole moment is p = Ql where , is the
distance between the two equal but opposite charges of magnitude Q.

When V is known, the components of E can be found from the inverse of Eq. 23–4a, namely

Ex = - ∂V/∂x Ey = - ∂V/∂y Ez = - ∂V/∂z (23–9)

CHAPTER 24 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage - Summary

A capacitor is a device used to store charge (and electric energy), and consists of two
nontouching conductors. The two conductors generally hold equal and opposite charges of
magnitude Q. The ratio of this charge Q to the potential difference V between the conductors is
called the capacitance, C:
Q
C or Q  CV. (24–1)
V

The capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor is proportional to the area A of each plate and
inversely proportional to their separation d:

C = o A/d (24–2)

When capacitors are connected in parallel, the equivalent capacitance is the sum of the
individual capacitances:

Ceq  C1  C2  . (24–3)

When capacitors are connected in series, the reciprocal of the equivalent capacitance equals the
sum of the reciprocals of the individual capacitances:

1 1 1
   . (24–4)
Ceq C1 C2

A charged capacitor stores an amount of electric energy given by

Q2
U  12 QV  12 CV 2  1
2 . (24–5)
C

This energy can be thought of as stored in the electric field between the plates. In any electric

field E in free space the energy density u (energy per unit volume) is

u = ½ o E2 (24–6)

The space between the conductors contains a nonconducting material such as air, paper, or
plastic. These materials are referred to as dielectrics, and the capacitance is proportional to a
property of dielectrics called the dielectric constant, K (nearly equal to 1 for air). For a parallel-
plate capacitor

C = Ko A/d =  A/d (24–8)

where  = Ko is called the permittivity of the dielectric material.

When a dielectric is present, the energy density is

u = ½ Ko E2 = ½  E2

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