Ee Objective 1pdf
Ee Objective 1pdf
Ee Objective 1pdf
9. A 60-watt light bulb carries a current of 0.5 A. The total charge passing through it in one
hour
is:
= 1800C
10. A 10-ohm resistor has a constant current. If 1200C of charge flow through it in 4 minutes
what
is the value of the current?
= 15A
11. Conduction electrons move to the right in a certain wire. This indicates that:
= the current density and electric field both point left
12. Two wires made of different materials have the same uniform current density. They carry
the
same current only if:
= their cross-sectional areas are the same
13. A wire with a length of 150m and a radius of 0.15mm carries a current with a uniform
current
density of 2.8 × 107 A/m2. The current is:
= 2.0A
14. In a conductor carrying a current we expect the electron drift speed to be:
=. much less than the average electron speed
15. Two substances are identical except that the electron mean free time for substance A is
twice the electron mean free time for substance B. If the same electric field exists in
both substances
the electron drift speed in A is:
= twice that in B
16. The current is zero in a conductor when no potential difference is applied because:
= for every electron with a given velocity there is another with a velocity of equal
magnitude
and opposite direction.
17. The current density is the same in two wires. Wire A has twice the free-electron
concentration of wire B. The drift speed of electrons in A is:
= half that of electrons in B
18. Copper contains 8.4×1028 free electrons/m3. A copper wire of cross-sectional area 7.4×10
−7 m2
20. Of the following, the copper conductor that has the least resistance is:
= thick, short and cool
21. A cylindrical copper rod has resistance R. It is reformed to twice its original length with
no
change of volume. Its new resistance is:
= 4R
24. A nichrome wire is 1m long and 1 × 10−6 m2 in cross-sectional area. When connected to a
potential difference of 2V, a current of 4A exists in the wire. The resistivity of this nichrome
is:
= 5 × 10−7 Ω · m
25. Two conductors are made of the same material and have the same length. Conductor A is
a
solid wire of diameter 1 m. Conductor B is a hollow tube of inside diameter 1m and outside
diameter 2 m. The ratio of their resistance, RA/RB, is:
=3
27. A certain sample carries a current of 4A when the potential difference is 2V and a current
of
10A when the potential difference is 4V. This sample:
= has a resistance of 0.5 Ω at 1V
28. A current of 0.5A exists in a 60-ohm lamp. The applied potential difference is:
= 30V
29. Two wires are made of the same material and have the same length but different radii.
They
are joined end-to-end and a potential difference is maintained across the combination. Of the
following the quantity that is the same for both wires is:
= current
30. For an ohmic substance the resistivity is the proportionality constant for:
= current density and electric field
33. For a cylindrical resistor made of ohmic material, the resistance does NOT depend on:
= the current
34. For an ohmic substance, the electron drift velocity is proportional to:
= the electric field in the sample
35. You wish to triple the rate of energy dissipation in a heating device. To do this you could
triple:
= the resistance keeping the current the same
36. A student kept her 60-watt, 120-volt study lamp turned on from 2:00 PM until 2:00 AM.
How
many coulombs of charge went through it?
= 21, 600
37. A flat iron is marked “120V, 600W”. In normal use, the current in it is:
=5A
38. An certain resistor dissipates 0.5W when connected to a 3V potential difference. When
connected
to a 1V potential difference, this resistor will dissipate:
= 0.056W
39. An ordinary light bulb is marked “60W, 120V”. Its resistance is:
= 240 Ω
40. The mechanical equivalent of heat is 1 cal = 4.18 J. The specific heat of water is 1 cal/g ·
K. An electric immersion water heater, rated at 400W, should heat a kilogram of water
from 10◦ C to 30◦ C in about:
= 3.5 min
41. It is better to send 10, 000kW of electric power long distances at 10, 000V rather than at
220V because:
= there is less heating in the transmission wires
42. Suppose the electric company charges 10 cents per kW·h. How much does it cost to use
a 125W lamp 4 hours a day for 30 days?
= $1.50
43. A certain x-ray tube requires a current of 7mA at a voltage of 80 kV. The rate of energy
dissipation (in watts) is:
= 560
44. The mechanical equivalent of heat is 1 cal = 4.18 J. A heating coil, connected to a 120-V
source, provides 60, 000 calories in 10 minutes. The current in the coil is:
= 3.5A
45. A current of 0.3A is passed through a lamp for 2 minutes using a 6-V power supply. The
energy
dissipated by this lamp during the 2 minutes is:
= 216 J
49. The total negative charge on the electrons in 1 mol of helium (atomic number 2, molar
mass 4) is:
=1.9 × 105 C
50. The total negative charge on the electrons in 1 kg of helium (atomic number 2, molar
mass 4) is:
=4.8 × 107 C
51. A wire carries a steady current of 2 A. The charge that passes a cross section in 2 s is:
= 4C
52. A wire contains a steady current of 2 A. The number of electrons that pass a cross
section in 2 s is:
= 2.5 × 1019
53. The charge on a glass rod that has been rubbed with silk is called positive:
=by arbitrary convention
56. When a hard rubber rod is given a negative charge by rubbing it with wool:
= negative charges are transferred from wool to rod
59. A neutral metal ball is suspended by a string. A positively charged insulating rod is placed
near the ball, which is observed to be attracted to the rod. This is because:
= there is a rearrangement of the electrons in the ball
60. A positively charged insulating rod is brought close to an object that is suspended by a
string. If the object is repelled away from the rod we can conclude:
= the object is positively charged
61. A positively charged metal sphere A is brought into contact with an uncharged metal
sphere B. As a result:
=both spheres are positively charged
62. The leaves of a positively charged electroscope diverge more when an object is brought
near the knob of the electroscope. The object must be:
= positively charged
63. A negatively charged rubber rod is brought near the knob of a positively charged
electroscope. The result is that:
= the electroscope leaves will tend to collapse
64. An electroscope is charged by induction using a glass rod that has been made positive by
rubbing it with silk. The electroscope leaves:
= gain electrons
65. A charged insulator can be discharged by passing it just above a flame. This is because
the flame:
= contains ions
66. A small object has charge Q. Charge q is removed from it and placed on a second small
object. The two objects are placed 1m apart. For the force that each object exerts on the
other to be a maximum. q should be:
= Q/2
67. Two small charged objects attract each other with a force F when separated by a
distance d. If the charge on each object is reduced to one-fourth of its original value and
the distance between them is reduced to d/2 the force becomes:
= F/4
68. Two identical conducting spheres A and B carry equal charge. They are separated by a
distance much larger than their diameters. A third identical conducting sphere C is
uncharged. Sphere C is first touched to A, then to B, and finally removed. As a result, the
electrostatic force between A and B, which was originally F, becomes:
= 3F/8
69. Two particles, X and Y, are 4m apart. X has a charge of 2Q and Y has a charge of Q. The
force of X on Y:
=has the same magnitude as the force of Y on X
70. A 5.0-C charge is 10m from a −2.0-C charge. The electrostatic force on the positive
charge is:
=9.0 × 108 N toward the negative charge
71. Two identical charges, 2.0m apart, exert forces of magnitude 4.0N on each other. The
value of either charge is:
=4.2 × 10−5 C
72. Two particles have charges Q and −Q (equal magnitude and opposite sign). For a net
force ofMzero to be exerted on a third charge it must be placed:
=at none of these places (there is no place)
73. Particles 1, with charge q1, and 2, with charge q2, are on the x axis, with particle 1 at x =
a and particle 2 at x = −2a. For the net force on a third charged particle, at the origin, to
be zero, q1 and q2 must be related by q2 =:
= 4q1
74. Two particles A and B have identical charge Q. For a net force of zero to be exerted on a
third charged particle it must be placed:
=midway between A and B
75. A particle with charge 2-μC is placed at the origin, an identical particle, with the same
charge, is placed 2m from the origin on the x axis, and a third identical particle, with the
same charge, is placed 2m from the origin on the y axis. The magnitude of the force on
the particle at the origin is:
= 1.3 × 10−2 N
76. Charge Q is spread uniformly along the circumference of a circle of radius R. A point
particle with charge q is placed at the center of this circle. The total force exerted on the
particle can be calculated by Coulomb’s law:
=the result of the calculation is zero
77. A particle with charge Q is on the y axis a distance a from the origin and a particle with
charge q is on the x axis a distance d from the origin. The value of d for which the x
component of the force on the second particle is the greatest is:
= a/√2
78. In the Rutherford model of the hydrogen atom, a proton (mass M, charge Q) is the
nucleus
and an electron (mass m, charge q) moves around the proton in a circle of radius r. Let k
denote the Coulomb force constant (1/4π0) and G the universal gravitational constant. The
ratio of the electrostatic force to the gravitational force between electron and proton is:
= kQq/GMm
79. A particle with a charge of 5 × 10−6 C and a mass of 20 g moves uniformly with a speed
of 7m/s in a circular orbit around a stationary particle with a charge of −5×10−6 C. The
radius of the orbit is:
= 0.23m
80. Charge is distributed uniformly on the surface of a spherical balloon (an insulator). A
point particle with charge q is inside. The electrical force on the particle is greatest
when:
= it is anywhere inside (the force is zero everywhere)
81. Charge is distributed on the surface of a spherical conducting shell. A point particle with
charge q is inside. If polarization effects are negligible the electrical force on the particle is
greatest when:
= it is near the inside surface of the balloon
83. Experimenter A uses a test charge q0 and experimenter B uses a test charge −2q0 to
measure an electric field produced by stationary charges. A finds a field that is:
= the same in both magnitude and direction as the field found by B
87. A certain physics textbook shows a region of space in which two electric field lines cross
each other. We conclude that:
= the author made a mistake
89. The electric field at a distance of 10 cm from an isolated point particle with a charge of
2×10−9 C is:
=1800N/C
90. An isolated charged point particle produces an electric field with magnitude E at a point
2m away from the charge. A point at which the field magnitude is E/4 is:
= 4m away from the particle
91. An isolated charged point particle produces an electric field with magnitude E at a point
2m away. At a point 1m from the particle the magnitude of the field is:
= 4E
92. Two point particles, with a charges of q1 and q2, are placed a distance r apart. The
electric field is zero at a point P between the particles on the line segment connecting
them. We conclude that:
= q1 and q2 must have the same sign but may have different magnitudes
93. Two point particles, one with charge +8 × 10−9 C and the other with charge −2 × 10−9 C,
are separated by 4 m. The electric field in N/C midway between them is:
= 22.5
94. Two charged point particles are located at two vertices of an equilateral triangle and the
electric field is zero at the third vertex. We conclude:
= at least one other charged particle is present
95. Two point particles, with the same charge, are located at two vertices of an equilateral
triangle.A third charged particle is placed so the electric field at the third vertex is zero.
The third particle must:
= be on the perpendicular bisector of the line joining the first two charges
96. The electric field due to a uniform distribution of charge on a spherical shell is zero:
= only inside the shell
97. A charged particle is placed in an electric field that varies with location. No force is
exerted
on this charge:
=at locations where the electric field is zero
98. The magnitude of the force of a 400-N/C electric field on a 0.02-C point charge is:
=8.0N
99. A 200-N/C electric field is in the positive x direction. The force on an electron in this field
is:
= 3.2 × 10−17 N in the negative x direction
100. An electron traveling north enters a region where the electric field is uniform and points
north. The electron:
= slows down
101. An electron traveling north enters a region where the electric field is uniform and points
west. The electron:
=veers east
102. An electric dipole consists of a particle with a charge of +6×10−6 C at the origin and a
particle with a charge of −6 × 10−6C on the x axis at x = 3× 10−3 m. Its dipole moment is:
= 1.8 × 10−8 C · m, in the negative x direction
105. A uniform electric field of 300N/C makes an angle of 25◦ with the dipole moment of an
electric dipole. If the torque exerted by the field has a magnitude of 2.5×10−7 N·m, the
dipole moment must be:
= 2.0 × 10−9 C · m
106. When the dipole moment of a dipole in a uniform electric field rotates to become more
nearly
aligned with the field:
= the field does positive work and the potential energy decreases
107. The dipole moment of a dipole in a 300-N/C electric field is initially perpendicular to the
field, but it rotates so it is in the same direction as the field. If the moment has a
magnitude of 2 × 10−9 C · m, the work done by the field is:
= 6 × 10−7 J
109. A charged oil drop with a mass of 2 × 10−4 kg is held suspended by a downward electric
field
of 300N/C. The charge on the drop is:
= −6.5 × 10−6 C
110. A total charge of 6.3×10−8 C is distributed uniformly throughout a 2.7-cm radius sphere.
The volume charge density is:
= 7.6 × 10−4 C/m3
111. Charge is placed on the surface of a 2.7-cm radius isolated conducting sphere. The
surface charge density is uniform and has the value 6.9 × 10−6 C/m2. The total charge on
the sphere is:
= 6.3 × 10−8 C
112. A spherical shell has an inner radius of 3.7 cm and an outer radius of 4.5 cm. If charge is
distributed uniformly throughout the shell with a volume density of 6.1×10−4 C/m3 the total
charge is:
= 1.0 × 10−7 C
113. A cylinder has a radius of 2.1 cm and a length of 8.8 cm. Total charge 6.1×10−7 C is
distributed uniformly throughout. The volume charge density is:
= 5.0 × 10−3 C/m3
114. When a piece of paper is held with one face perpendicular to a uniform electric field the
flux through it is 25N · m2 /C. When the paper is turned 25◦ with respect to the field the
flux through it is:
= 23N · m2/C
115. The flux of the electric field (24N/C)ˆi + (30N/C)ˆj + (16N/C)ˆk through a 2.0m2 portion
of the yz plane is:
= 48N · m2 /C
116. A charged point particle is placed at the center of a spherical Gaussian surface. The
electric flux ΦE is changed if:
= the point charge is moved to just outside the sphere
117. Choose the INCORRECT statement:
= According to Gauss’ law, if a closed surface encloses no charge, then the electric field
must vanish everywhere on the surface
118. The outer surface of the cardboard center of a paper towel roll:
= cannot be a Gaussian surface because it is not a closed surface
120. A particle with charge 5.0-μC is placed at the corner of a cube. The total electric flux in
N · m2 /C through all sides of the cube is:
= 5.6 × 105
121. A conducting sphere of radius 0.01m has a charge of 1.0 × 10−9 C deposited on it. The
magnitude of the electric field in N/C just outside the surface of the sphere is:
= 900
122. A round wastepaper basket with a 0.15-m radius opening is in a uniform electric field of
300N/C, perpendicular to the opening. The total flux through the sides and bottom, in
N · m2 C, is:
= 21
123. 10C of charge are placed on a spherical conducting shell. A particle with a charge of
−3C is placed at the center of the cavity. The net charge on the inner surface of the shell
is:
= +3C
124. 10C of charge are placed on a spherical conducting shell. A particle with a charge of
−3C is placed at the center of the cavity. The net charge on the outer surface of the shell
is:
= +7C
125. A 30-N/C uniform electric field points perpendicularly toward the left face of a large
neutral
conducting sheet. The surface charge density in C/m2 on the left and right faces, respectively,
are:
=−2.7 × 10−9 C/m2; +2.7 × 10−9 C/m2
126. A 3.5-cm radius hemisphere contains a total charge of 6.6 × 10−7 C. The flux through
the
rounded portion of the surface is 9.8 × 104 N · m2 /C. The flux through the flat base is:
= −2.3 × 104 N · m2 /C
127. Charge is distributed uniformly along a long straight wire. The electric field 2 cm from
the
wire is 20N/C. The electric field 4 cm from the wire is:
= 10N/C
128. Charge is distributed uniformly on the surface of a large flat plate. The electric field 2
cm from the plate is 30N/C. The electric field 4 cm from the plate is:
= 30N/C
129. A particle with charge Q is placed outside a large neutral conducting sheet. At any point
in the interior of the sheet the electric field produced by charges on the surface is
directed:
= toward Q
130. A hollow conductor is positively charged. A small uncharged metal ball is lowered by a
silk thread through a small opening in the top of the conductor and allowed to touch its
inner surface. After the ball is removed, it will have:
= no appreciable charge
131. A particle with a charge of 5.5×10−8C is 3.5 cm from a particle with a charge of −2.3×10−
8 C.
The potential energy of this two-particle system, relative to the potential energy at infinite
separation, is:
= −3.2 × 10−4 J
132. A particle with a charge of 5.5 × 10−8C is fixed at the origin. A particle with a charge of
−2.3×10−8 C is moved from x = 3.5 cm on the x axis to y = 4.3 cm on the y axis. The change
in potential energy of the two-particle system is:
= 6.0 × 10−5 J
133. A particle with a charge of 5.5 × 10−8 C charge is fixed at the origin. A particle with a
charge of −2.3 × 10−8 C charge is moved from x = 3.5 cm on the x axis to y = 3.5 cm on
the y axis. The change in the potential energy of the two-particle system is:
=0
134. Three particles lie on the x axis: particle 1, with a charge of 1×10−8 C is at x = 1 cm,
particle
2, with a charge of 2 × 10−8 C, is at x = 2 cm, and particle 3, with a charge of −3 × 10−8 C,
is at x = 3 cm. The potential energy of this arrangement, relative to the potential energy for
infinite separation, is:
= −4.9 × 10−4 J
135. Two identical particles, each with charge q, are placed on the x axis, one at the origin
and the
other at x = 5 cm. A third particle, with charge −q, is placed on the x axis so the potential
energy of the three-particle system is the same as the potential energy at infinite separation.
Its x coordinate is:
= 13 cm
136. The potential difference between two points is 100V. If a particle with a charge of 2C is
transported from one of these points to the other, the magnitude of the work done is:
=200 J
137. During a lightning discharge, 30C of charge move through a potential difference of
1.0×108 V
in 2.0 × 10−2 s. The energy released by this lightning bolt is:
= 3.0 × 109 J
138. An electron is accelerated from rest through a potential difference V . Its final speed is
proportional to:
= √V
139. Two large parallel conducting plates are separated by a distance d, placed in a vacuum,
and
connected to a source of potential difference V . An oxygen ion, with charge 2e, starts from
rest on the surface of one plate and accelerates to the other. If e denotes the magnitude of the
electron charge, the final kinetic energy of this ion is:
= 2Ev
141. An electron has charge −e and mass me. A proton has charge e and mass 1840me. A
“proton volt” is equal to:
= 1 eV
142. Two conducting spheres are far apart. The smaller sphere carries a total charge Q. The
larger sphere has a radius that is twice that of the smaller and is neutral. After the two
spheres are connected by a conducting wire, the charges on the smaller and larger
spheres, respectively, are:
= Q/3 and 2Q/3
143. A conducting sphere with radius R is charged until the magnitude of the electric field
just
outside its surface is E. The electric potential of the sphere, relative to the potential far away,
is:
= ER
144. A 5-cm radius conducting sphere has a surface charge density of 2 ×10−6 C/m2 on its
surface. Its electric potential, relative to the potential far away, is:
= 1.1 × 104 V
145. A hollow metal sphere is charged to a potential V . The potential at its center is:
=V
148. Eight identical spherical raindrops are each at a potential V , relative to the potential far
away. They coalesce to make one spherical raindrop whose potential is:
= 4V
149. A metal sphere carries a charge of 5 × 10−9 C and is at a potential of 400V, relative to
the potential far away. The potential at the center of the sphere is:
= 400V
150. A 5-cm radius isolated conducting sphere is charged so its potential is +100V, relative
to the potential far away. The charge density on its surface is:
= +1.8 × 10−8 C/m2
151. A conducting sphere has charge Q and its electric potential is V , relative to the
potential far away. If the charge is doubled to 2Q, the potential is:
= 2V
152. The potential difference between the ends of a 2-meter stick that is parallel to a
uniform electric field is 400V. The magnitude of the electric field is:
= 800V/m
153. In a certain region of space the electric potential increases uniformly from east to west
and does not vary in any other direction. The electric field:
= points east and does not vary with position
154. If the electric field is in the positive x direction and has a magnitude given by E = Cx2,
where C is a constant, then the electric potential is given by V =:
= −Cx3/3
155. The work required to carry a particle with a charge of 6.0C from a 5.0-V equipotential
surface to a 6.0-V equipotential surface and back again to the 5.0-V surface is:
=0
156. The equipotential surfaces associated with a charged point particles are:
= concentric spheres centered at the particle
157. A particle with charge q is to be brought from far away to a point near an electric dipole.
No work is done if the final position of the particle is on:
= a line that is perpendicular to the dipole moment
160. A capacitor C “has a charge Q”. The actual charges on its plates are:
=Q, −Q
161. Each plate of a capacitor stores a charge of magnitude 1mC when a 100-V potential
difference is applied. The capacitance is:
= 10 μF
165. If both the plate area and the plate separation of a parallel-plate capacitor are doubled,
the capacitance is:
= unchanged
166. If the plate area of an isolated charged parallel-plate capacitor is doubled:
= the potential difference is halved
169. A parallel-plate capacitor has a plate area of 0.2m2 and a plate separation of 0.1mm. To
obtain an electric field of 2.0 × 106 V/m between the plates, the magnitude of the charge on
each plate should be:
= 7.1 × 10^−6 C
170. A parallel-plate capacitor has a plate area of 0.2m2 and a plate separation of 0.1 mm. If
the
charge on each plate has a magnitude of 4 × 10−6 C the potential difference across the plates
is approximately:
= 2 × 10^2 V
171. The capacitance of a spherical capacitor with inner radius a and outer radius b is
proportional
to:
= ab/(b − a)
172. The capacitance of a single isolated spherical conductor with radius R is proportional to:
=R
174. A battery is used to charge a series combination of two identical capacitors. If the
potential difference across the battery terminals is V and total charge Q flows through
the battery during the charging process then the charge on the positive plate of each
capacitor and the potential difference across each capacitor are:
= Q and V/2, respectively
175. A battery is used to charge a parallel combination of two identical capacitors. If the
potential
difference across the battery terminals is V and total charge Q flows through the battery during
the charging process then the charge on the positive plate of each capacitor and the potential
difference across each capacitor are:
= Q/2 and V , respectively
176. A 2-μF and a 1-μF capacitor are connected in series and a potential difference is
applied across
the combination. The 2-μF capacitor has:
= half the potential difference of the 1-μF capacitor
177. A 2-μF and a 1-μF capacitor are connected in parallel and a potential difference is
applied across the combination. The 2-μF capacitor has:
= twice the charge of the 1-μF capacitor
178. Let Q denote charge, V denote potential difference, and U denote stored energy. Of
these quantities, capacitors in series must have the same:
= Q only
179. Let Q denote charge, V denote potential difference, and U denote stored energy. Of
these quantities, capacitors in parallel must have the same:
= V only
180. Capacitors C1 and C2 are connected in parallel. The equivalent capacitance is given by:
= C1 + C2
181. Capacitors C1 and C2 are connected in series. The equivalent capacitance is given by:
= C1C2/(C1 + C2)
182. Capacitors C1 and C2 are connected in series and a potential difference is applied to the
combination. If the capacitor that is equivalent to the combination has the same potential
difference, then the charge on the equivalent capacitor is the same as:
= the charge on C1
183. Capacitors C1 and C2 are connected in parallel and a potential difference is applied to
thecombination. If the capacitor that is equivalent to the combination has the same
potential difference, then the charge on the equivalent capacitor is the same as:
= the sum of the charges on C1 and C2
184. Two identical capacitors are connected in series and two, each identical to the first, are
connected
in parallel. The equivalent capacitance of the series connection is the equivalent
capacitance of parallel connection.
= one-fourth
185. Two identical capacitors, each with capacitance C, are connected in parallel and the
combination
is connected in series to a third identical capacitor. The equivalent capacitance of this
arrangement is:
= 2C/3
186. A 2-μF and a 1-μF capacitor are connected in series and charged from a battery. They
store
charges P and Q, respectively. When disconnected and charged separately using the same
battery, they have charges R and S, respectively. Then:
=R>S>Q=P
188. A charged capacitor stores 10C at 40V. Its stored energy is:
=200 J
189. To store a total of 0.040 J of energy in the two identical capacitors shown, each should
have a capacitance of: 200V
= 1.0 μJ
191. A parallel-plate capacitor has a plate area of 0.3m2 and a plate separation of 0.1 mm. If
the
charge on each plate has a magnitude of 5×10−6 C then the force exerted by one plate on the
other has a magnitude of about:
= 5N
192. A certain capacitor has a capacitance of 5.0 μF. After it is charged to 5.0 μC and
isolated, the
plates are brought closer together so its capacitance becomes 10 μF. The work done by the
agent is about:
= −1.25 × 10−6 J
193. A dielectric slab is slowly inserted between the plates of a parallel plate capacitor, while
the
potential difference between the plates is held constant by a battery. As it is being inserted:
= the capacitance and the charge on the positive plate increase but the potential
difference
between the plates remains the same
194. An air-filled parallel-plate capacitor has a capacitance of 1 pF. The plate separation is
then
doubled and a wax dielectric is inserted, completely filling the space between the plates. As a
result, the capacitance becomes 2 pF. The dielectric constant of the wax is:
= 4.0
195. Two capacitors are identical except that one is filled with air and the other with oil. Both
capacitors carry the same charge. The ratio of the electric fields Eair/Eoil is:
= between 1 and infinity
196. A parallel-plate capacitor, with air dielectric, is charged by a battery, after which the
battery is disconnected. A slab of glass dielectric is then slowly inserted between the
plates. As it is being inserted:
= a force attracts the glass into the capacitor
197. Two parallel-plate capacitors with the same plate separation but different capacitance
are connected in parallel to a battery. Both capacitors are filled with air. The quantity
that is NOT the same for both capacitors when they are fully charged is:
= charge on the positive plate
198. Two parallel-plate capacitors with the same plate area but different capacitance are
connected
in parallel to a battery. Both capacitors are filled with air. The quantity that is the same for
both capacitors when they are fully charged is:
= potential difference
199. Two parallel-plate capacitors with different plate separation but the same capacitance
are connected in series to a battery. Both capacitors are filled with air. The quantity that
is NOT the same for both capacitors when they are fully charged is:
= electric field between the plates
200. Two parallel-plate capacitors with different capacitance but the same plate separation
are
connected in series to a battery. Both capacitors are filled with air. The quantity that is the
same for both capacitors when they are fully charged is:
= charge on the positive plate