Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e...

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Electric Field

Transcript of Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e...

Page 1: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

Page 2: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Review…

•We use Coulomb’s Law to find the force between two charges, q1 and q2, separated by a distance r:• k=9x109 Nm2/C2

• Opposite charges attract, like charges repel

Magnitude

Direction

Page 3: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

You Try it…

• What is the magnitude of the force on the proton due to the electron in hydrogen? • k=9x109 Nm2/C2

• F= 2.3x10-8 N

• What is the direction?

+ -

r= 1x10-10 m

Qp=1.6x10-19C Qe=-1.6x10-19C

Page 4: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

You Try it…

• Calculate the force on the +2μC charge due to the other two charges.• • k=9x109 Nm2/C2

Page 5: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• Charged particles create electric fields in the space around them.• Any other charged object that comes

into this space will interact with this electric field.• Direction of the E-field is the same as

for the force that a + charge would feel at that location.

+

Page 6: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• The strength of the electric field is measured by placing a positive “test charge” at a spot near the source charge and measuring the force on the “test charge”

+ +

F

Qp r= 1x10-10 m

q0

Test chargeSource charge

Page 7: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• Electric Field is defined as the electric force per unit charge.

• Units are N/C• E is a vector. The direction is taken as

the direction of the force it would exert on a POSITIVE point charge.

Page 8: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• The electric field from multiple point charges can be obtained by taking the vector sum of the electric fields of the individual charges.

Page 9: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Your Turn…

•What is the direction of the electric field at point A?

A

C

Page 10: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• It is the surrounding charges that create an electric field at a given point.• Any charge (positive or negative) placed

at the point interacts with the field and experiences a force.• Note: positive charges placed in an E-field

will move in the direction of the field. Negative charges will move in the opposite direction.

Page 11: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Force vs. Electric Field

• Electric Force (F) is the force felt by a charge at some location• Electric Field (E) is found for a specific

location (any location) and tells what the electric force would be if a positive charge were located there• F = Eq• Both are vectors, with magnitude and

direction

Page 12: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Force vs. Electric Field

• F = Eq• Note, we can calculate the net E-field for all

the fixed charges and then use this value to find the force on other charges • Examples: ions/electrons in neurons, heart

tissue, and cell membranes.

Page 13: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field

• The electric field is radially outward from a single positive point charge. Why?• What direction would E be for a single

negative point charge?• The circles represent where the magnitude

of E is the same (later we will see that these are equipotential surfaces)

Page 14: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Electric Field Lines

• We use Electric Field Lines to convey information about an E-field• Closeness (or density) of lines shows the field

strength. Note: lines NEVER cross• The number of lines entering or leaving a charge

is proportional to the magnitude of the charge.• The arrow gives the direction of the E-field

(start on +, end on – charge)

Page 17: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Your turn…

•Which charge is positive and which charge is negative? How do you know?

Page 18: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Your turn…

•What is the ratio of charges? QA: QB

Page 19: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Your turn…

•Where is the E-field stronger: at point X or point Y? How do you know?

Page 21: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

Assignment

p. 563 Focus #8, 9, 12, 13, 17p. 564-565 Problems #14, 29, 30, 32, 34Do Focus tonight. We will do the Problems on white boards tomorrow!

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E-Field inside a conductor

• In a conductor, electrons are free to move.• Therefore, if electrons feel an electric force,

they will move until the feel no more force (F=0).• Since F=Eq, if F=0 then E=0 inside of a

conductor. ALWAYS!• For a conductor at equilibrium, any excess

charge resides on the surface of the conductor.

Page 23: Electric Field. Review… Magnitude Direction You Try it… + - r= 1x10 -10 m Q p =1.6x10 -19 C Q e =-1.6x10 -19 C.

E-Field inside a conductor

•A conductor shields any charge within it from electric fields created outside the conductor.