Physics Unit 08 Notes
Physics Unit 08 Notes
Physics Unit 08 Notes
Source of Charge
An atom
o ________________
Protons – ________________ charge
Neutrons – ________________ charge, but same ________________ as proton
o Electron cloud
Electron – ________________ charge, ________________ mass
𝑞𝑒 = −1.60 × 10−19 𝐶
Unit of charge: ________________ (C)
𝑞𝑒 is the ________________ charge discovered
Electricity is ________________ → comes in ________________ numbers
|𝑞𝑒 | is the ______________________ unit of charge
In nature atoms have ________________ net charge
o # ________________ = # ________________
How many electrons does it take to make a charge of −4 × 10−6 𝐶? What is their mass (𝑚𝑒 = 9.11 × 10−31 𝑘𝑔)?
Charging by contact
Negative charged rod gives some ________________ to sphere
Sphere becomes ________________ charged until charges are ________________
Charging by Induction
Charge without ________________
Charged rod comes near ________________ sphere
The like charges are ________________ to
________________ side of sphere
A ________________ wire lets the charges
________________ from the sphere
The ________________ wire is ________________, then
the charged rod
Sphere is ________________
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-01 Static Electric Charge and Conductors Name: _____________________________
Homework
1. There are very large numbers of charged particles in most objects. Why, then, don’t most objects exhibit static electricity?
2. An eccentric inventor attempts to levitate by first placing a large negative charge on himself and then putting a large
positive charge on the ceiling of his workshop. Instead, while attempting to place a large negative charge on himself, his
clothes fly off. Explain.
3. When a glass rod is rubbed with silk, it becomes positive and the silk becomes negative—yet both attract dust. Does the
dust have a third type of charge that is attracted to both positive and negative? Explain.
4. Describe how a positively charged object can be used to give another object a negative charge. What is the name of this
process?
5. What is grounding? What effect does it have on a charged conductor? On a charged insulator?
6. A metallic object is given a positive charge by induction. (a) Does the mass of the object increase, decrease, or remain the
same? Why? (b) What happens to the mass of the object if it is given a negative charge by induction?
7. Common static electricity involves charges ranging from nanocoulombs to microcoulombs. (a) How many electrons are
needed to form a charge of –2.00 nC (b) How many electrons must be removed from a neutral object to leave a net charge
of 0.500 μC? (OpenStax 18.1) 𝟏. 𝟐𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎𝟏𝟎 electrons, 𝟑. 𝟏𝟑 × 𝟏𝟎𝟏𝟐 electrons
8. If 1.80 × 1020 electrons move through a pocket calculator during a full day’s operation, how many coulombs of charge
moved through it? (OpenStax 18.2) -28.8 C
9. To start a car engine, the car battery moves 3.75 × 1021 electrons through the starter motor. How many coulombs of
charge were moved? (OpenStax 18.3) -600 C
10. A certain lightning bolt moves 40.0 C of charge. How many fundamental units of charge |𝑞𝑒 | is this? (OpenStax 18.4)
𝟐. 𝟓𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟐𝟎
11. Suppose a speck of dust in an electrostatic precipitator has 1.0000 × 1012 protons in it and has a net charge of –5.00 nC (a
very large charge for a small speck). How many electrons does it have? (OpenStax 18.5) 1.03× 𝟏𝟎𝟏𝟐
12. An amoeba has 1.00 × 1016 protons and a net charge of 0.300 pC. (a) How many fewer electrons are there than protons?
(b) If you paired them up, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons? (OpenStax 18.6) 𝟏. 𝟖𝟖 × 𝟏𝟎𝟔 , 𝟏. 𝟖𝟖 ×
𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟎
13. Consider three identical metal spheres, A, B, and C. Sphere A carries a charge of +5q. Sphere B carries a charge of –q.
Sphere C carries no net charge. Spheres A and B are touched together and then separated. Sphere C is then touched to
sphere A and separated from it. Last, sphere C is touched to sphere B and separated from it. (a) How much charge ends up
on sphere C? What is the total charge on the three spheres (b) before they are allowed to touch each other and (c) after
they have touched? (Cutnell 18.5) 1.5q, 4q, 4q
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-02 Coulomb’s Law Name: ______________________________
Coulomb’s Law
________________ charges exert ________________ on each other
o Related to the ________________ of the charges and the ________________ between them
If the signs are ________________ force ________________
If the signs are ________________ force ________________
Coulomb’s Law
|𝒒𝟏 𝒒𝟐 |
𝑭=𝒌
𝒓𝟐
Where F = electrostatic force, k = constant (𝟖. 𝟗𝟗 × 𝟏𝟎𝟗 Nm2/C2), q = charge, r = distance between the charges
In a hydrogen atom, the electron (𝑞 = −1.60 × 10−19 C) is 5.29 × 10−11 m away from the proton of equal charge magnitude.
Find the electrical force of attraction.
There are three charges: 𝑞1 = +2 𝜇𝐶 at (0, 0.3) m, 𝑞2 = −3 𝜇𝐶 at (0, 0) m, 𝑞3 = +5 𝜇𝐶 at (0.1, 0.2) m. What is the force on 𝑞2 ?
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-02 Coulomb’s Law Name: ______________________________
Homework
1. The figure shows the charge distribution in a water molecule, which is called a polar molecule because it
has an inherent separation of charge. Given water’s polar character, explain what effect humidity has on
removing excess charge from objects.
2. 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.
3. Identical point charges are fixed to opposite corners of a square. Where does a third point charge experience the greater
net force, at one of the empty corners or at the center of the square? Account for your answer.
4. What is the repulsive force between two pith balls that are 8.00 cm apart and have equal charges of – 30.0 nC? (OpenStax
18.10) 𝟏. 𝟐𝟕 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟑 N
5. (a) How strong is the attractive force between a glass rod with a 0.700 μC charge and a silk cloth with a –0.600 μC charge,
which are 12.0 cm apart, using the approximation that they act like point charges? (b) Discuss how the answer to this
problem might be affected if the charges are distributed over some area and do not act like point charges. (OpenStax
18.11) 0.263 N
6. Two point charges exert a 5.00 N force on each other. What will the force become if the distance between them is
increased by a factor of three? (OpenStax 18.12) 0.556 N
7. Two point charges are brought closer together, increasing the force between them by a factor of 25. By what factor was
their separation decreased? (OpenStax 18.13) 5 times
8. How far apart must two point charges of 75.0 nC (typical of static electricity) be to have a force of 1.00 N between them?
(OpenStax 18.14) 7.12 mm
9. If two equal charges each of 1 C each are separated in air by a distance of 1 km, what is the magnitude of the force acting
between them? You will see that even at a distance as large as 1 km, the repulsive force is substantial because 1 C is a very
significant amount of charge. (OpenStax 18.15) 𝟗 × 𝟏𝟎𝟑 N
10. A test charge of +2 μC is placed halfway between a charge of +6 μC and another of +4 μC separated by 10 cm. (a) What is
the magnitude of the force on the test charge? (b) What is the direction of this force (away from or toward the +6 μC
charge)? (OpenStax 18.16) 10 N, away from the 6 μC charge
11. Bare free charges do not remain stationary when close together. To illustrate this, calculate the acceleration of two
isolated protons separated by 2.00 nm (a typical distance between gas atoms). (OpenStax 18.17) 𝟑. 𝟒𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎𝟏𝟔 m/s2
12. (a) Find the ratio of the electrostatic to gravitational force between two electrons. (b) What is this ratio for two protons?
(c) Why is the ratio different for electrons and protons? (OpenStax 18.21) 𝟒. 𝟏𝟔 × 𝟏𝟎𝟒𝟐 , 𝟏. 𝟐𝟒 × 𝟏𝟎𝟑𝟔
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-03 Electric Field and Electric Field Lines Name: _____________________________
Electric Field
We can use a _________________ charge to determine how the surrounding _________________ generate a _________________
o Pick a small test charge so it doesn’t _________________ the surrounding charge ____________________
A test charge (𝑞0 = 1.0 × 10−10 𝐶) experiences a force of 2 × 10−9 𝑁 when placed near a charged sphere. Determine the Force
per Coulomb that the charge experiences and predict the force on a 2 𝐶 charge.
There are two point charges of 𝑞1 = 4 𝐶 and 𝑞2 = 8 𝐶 and they are 10 m apart. Find point where E = 0 between them.
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-03 Electric Field and Electric Field Lines Name: _____________________________
What is wrong here?
Homework
1. Why must the test charge q0 in the definition of the electric field be vanishingly small?
2. The figure shows an electric field extending over three regions, labeled I, II, and III. Answer
the following questions. (a) Are there any isolated charges? If so, in what region and what
are their signs? (b) Where is the field strongest? (c) Where is it weakest? (d) Where is the
field the most uniform?
3. 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?
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. What is the magnitude and direction of an electric field that exerts a 2.00 × 10−5 N
upward force on a –1.75 μC charge? (OpenStax 18.27) -11.4 N/C downward
6. What is the magnitude and direction of the force exerted on a 3.50 μC charge by a 250 N/C electric
field that points due east? (OpenStax 18.28) 𝟖. 𝟕𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟒 N
7. Calculate the magnitude of the electric field 2.00 m from a point charge of 5.00 mC (such as found
on the terminal of a Van de Graaff). (OpenStax 18.29) 𝟏. 𝟏𝟑 × 𝟏𝟎𝟕 N/C
8. (a) What magnitude point charge creates a 10,000 N/C electric field at a distance of 0.250 m? (b)
How large is the field at 10.0 m? (OpenStax 18.30) 𝟔. 𝟗𝟒 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟖 C, 6.25 N/C
9. (a) Find the direction and magnitude of an electric field that exerts a 4.80 × 10−17 N westward
force on an electron. (b) What magnitude and direction force does this field exert on a proton?
(OpenStax 18.32) 300 N/C east, 𝟒. 𝟖𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟕 N east
10. (a) Sketch the electric field lines near a point charge +q. (b) Do the same for a point charge –3.00q.
(OpenStax 18.33) see below
11. Sketch the electric field lines a long distance from the charge distributions shown in Figure 18.26
(a) and (b) (OpenStax 18.34) see below
12. The figure shows the electric field lines near two charges 𝑞1 and 𝑞2 . What is the ratio of their
magnitudes? (b) Sketch the electric field lines a long distance from the charges shown in the
figure. (OpenStax 18.35) -1.9:1, like a point charge
13. Sketch the electric field lines in the vicinity of two opposite charges, where the negative charge is
three times greater in magnitude than the positive. (See Figure 18.47 for a similar situation). (OpenStax 18.36)
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-04 Conductors and Electric Fields in Equilibrium and Applications Name: ______________________________
Conductors in Equilibrium
Conductors contain _________________ charges that move _________________
When _________________ charges are present, they quickly _________________ to places where the electric field is
_________________________ to the surface
Then they _________________ moving
This is electrostatic _________________
If the surface is _________________, more charge will collect near the area of most ________________
If the curve is great enough, the E-field can be _________________ enough to _________________
excess charge
Shielding
A conductor _________________ any charge _________________ it from _________________ electrical fields
_________________ electrical equipment is _________________ by putting in a metal box called a _________________ Cage
_________________ _________________ is shielded by a metal _________________ around the central metal wire. This reduces
______________________ and _________________ _________________.
Applications
Copy Machine
Laser Printer
Ink Jet Printer
Homework
1. Is the object in the figure a conductor or an insulator? Justify your answer.
2. If the electric field lines in the figure above were perpendicular to the object, would it necessarily
be a conductor? Explain.
3. Why is a golfer with a metal club over her shoulder vulnerable to lightning in an open fairway? Would she be any safer
under a tree?
4. Are you relatively safe from lightning inside an automobile? Give two reasons.
5. Considering the figure, suppose that 𝑞𝑎 = 𝑞𝑑 and 𝑞𝑏 = 𝑞𝑐 . First show that q is in static
equilibrium. (You may neglect the gravitational force.) Then discuss whether the
equilibrium is stable or unstable, noting that this may depend on the signs of the charges
and the direction of displacement of q from the center of the square.
6. If 𝑞𝑎 = 0 in the figure, under what conditions will there be no net Coulomb force on q?
7. Sketch the electric field lines in the vicinity of the conductor in the figure given the field was
originally uniform and parallel to the object’s long axis. Is the resulting field small near the
long side of the object? (OpenStax 18.37) See other side
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-04 Conductors and Electric Fields in Equilibrium and Applications Name: ______________________________
8. Sketch the electric field between the two conducting plates shown in the figure, given the top
plate is positive and an equal amount of negative charge is on the bottom plate. Be certain to
indicate the distribution of charge on the plates. (OpenStax 18.39) See below
12. (a) Find the electric field at the location of 𝑞𝑎 in the figure if it is an equilateral triangle with sides
25 cm, given that 𝑞𝑏 = +10.00 𝜇𝐶 and 𝑞𝑐 =– 5.00 𝜇𝐶. (b) What is the force on 𝑞𝑎 , given that 𝑞𝑎 =
+1.50 𝑛𝐶? (OpenStax 18.49) 𝟏. 𝟐𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎𝟔 N/C at 30° above the –x-axis, 𝟏. 𝟖𝟖 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟑 N at 30°
above the –x-axis
13. A simple and common technique for accelerating electrons is shown in the figure, where there is a uniform electric field
between two plates. Electrons are released, usually from a hot filament, near the negative plate, and there is a small hole in
the positive plate that allows the electrons to continue moving. (a) Calculate the acceleration of the electron if the field
strength is 2.50 × 104 N/C. (b) Explain why the electron will not be pulled back to the positive plate once it moves through
the hole. (OpenStax 18.53) 𝟒. 𝟑𝟗 × 𝟏𝟎𝟏𝟓 m/s2, 𝑬 = 𝟎
Answer to #7 Answer to #8
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-05 Electric Potential Energy: Potential Difference Name: ______________________________
Electric Potential Energy
Change in ________________ due to ________________
o Force of gravity is _____________________
𝑚1 𝑚2
o 𝐹𝐺 = 𝐺
𝑟2
o 𝑊 = 𝑚𝑔ℎ0 – 𝑚𝑔ℎ𝑓 = 𝑃𝐸0 – 𝑃𝐸𝑓
Change in ________________ due to ________________ ________________
o Electrical Force is ______________________
𝑞1 𝑞2
o 𝐹𝐸 = 𝑘
𝑟2
o 𝑊 = 𝑃𝐸0 – 𝑃𝐸𝑓
𝑃𝐸𝑓 𝑃𝐸0 𝑊
𝑉𝑓 − 𝑉0 = − =−
𝑞0 𝑞0 𝑞0
𝛥𝑃𝐸 𝑊
𝛥𝑉 = =−
𝑞0 𝑞0
V and EPE can only be measured in ___________________
Electric force moves a charge of 2 × 10−10 C from point A to point B and does 5 × 10−6 J of work. What is the difference in
potential energies of A and B (𝑃𝐸𝐴 – 𝑃𝐸𝐵 )?
Batteries
Even though it is the ________________ electrons that actually _________________, tradition says that we talk about
________________ ________________ charges
Positive charge ________________ by ________________ terminal
Moves through light bulb and ________________ ________________ to heat
By the time the ________________ charge reaches the ________________ terminal, it has no ________________ energy left
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-05 Electric Potential Energy: Potential Difference Name: ______________________________
Volts and Energy
𝐸𝑃𝐸
𝑉=
𝑞0
𝐸𝑃𝐸 = 𝑞0 𝑉
Use this when solving _______________________ of energy problems
Unit for ________________ energy is ________________ ________________ (eV)
𝑒𝑉 = (1.60 × 10−19 𝐶)(1 𝑉) = 1.6 × 10−19 𝐽
When lightning strikes, the potential difference can be ten million volts between the cloud and ground. If an electron is at rest
and then is accelerated from the ground to the cloud, how fast will it be moving when it hits the cloud 0.5 km away (ignore
relativity effects)?
Homework
1. Voltage is the common word for potential difference. Which term is more descriptive, voltage or potential difference?
2. If the voltage between two points is zero, can a test charge be moved between them with zero net work being done? Can
this necessarily be done without exerting a force? Explain.
3. What is the relationship between voltage and energy? More precisely, what is the relationship between potential
difference and electric potential energy?
4. Voltages are always measured between two points. Why?
5. How are units of volts and electron volts related? How do they differ?
6. The drawing shows three possibilities for the potentials at two points, A
and B. In each case, the same positive charge is moved from A to B. In
which case, if any, is the most work done on the positive charge by the
electric force? Account for your answer.
7. Find the ratio of speeds of an electron and a negative hydrogen ion (one having an extra electron) accelerated through the
same voltage, assuming non-relativistic final speeds. Take the mass of the hydrogen ion to be 1.67 × 10−27 kg. (OpenStax
19.1) 42.8
8. An evacuated tube uses an accelerating voltage of 40 kV to accelerate electrons to hit a copper plate and produce x-rays.
Non-relativistically, what would be the maximum speed of these electrons? (OpenStax 19.2) 𝟏. 𝟏𝟕 × 𝟏𝟎𝟖 m/s
9. A bare helium nucleus has two positive charges and a mass of 6.64 × 10−27 kg. (a) Calculate its kinetic energy in joules at
2.00% of the speed of light. (b) What is this in electron volts? (c) What voltage would be needed to obtain this energy?
(OpenStax 19.3) 𝟏. 𝟐𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟑 J, 𝟕. 𝟓𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟓 eV, 𝟑. 𝟕𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎𝟓 V
10. The temperature near the center of the Sun is thought to be 15 million degrees Celsius (1.5 × 107 °C). Through what
voltage must a singly charged ion be accelerated to have the same energy as the average kinetic energy of ions at this
temperature? (OpenStax 19.5) 𝟏. 𝟗 × 𝟏𝟎𝟑 V
11. A lightning bolt strikes a tree, moving 20.0 C of charge through a potential difference of 1.00 × 102 MV. (a) What energy
was dissipated? (b) What mass of water could be raised from 15 °C to the boiling point and then boiled by this energy? (c)
Discuss the damage that could be caused to the tree by the expansion of the boiling steam. (OpenStax 19.7) 𝟐. 𝟎𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟗 J,
766 kg, BOOM!
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-06 Electric Potential in a Uniform Electric Field Name: ____________________________
On picture, E-field lines show ___________________. V lines are where V are _________________
A doubly charged ion is accelerated to an energy of 15.0 keV by the electric field between two parallel conducting plates
separated by 3.00 mm. What is the electric field strength between the plates?
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-06 Electric Potential in a Uniform Electric Field Name: ____________________________
Homework
1. Discuss how potential difference and electric field strength are related. Give an example.
2. What is the strength of the electric field in a region where the electric potential is constant?
3. Will a negative charge, initially at rest, move toward higher or lower potential? Explain why.
4. Show that units of V/m and N/C for electric field strength are indeed equivalent. (OpenStax 19.13)
5. What is the strength of the electric field between two parallel conducting plates separated by 1.00 cm and having a
potential difference (voltage) between them of 1.50 × 104 V? (OpenStax 19.14) 𝟏. 𝟓𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟔 V/m
6. The electric field strength between two parallel conducting plates separated by 4.00 cm is 7.50 × 104 V/m. (a) What is the
potential difference between the plates? (b) The plate with the lowest potential is taken to be at zero volts. What is the
potential 1.00 cm from that plate (and 3.00 cm from the other)? (OpenStax 19.15) 3.00 kV, 750 V
7. How far apart are two conducting plates that have an electric field strength of 4.50 × 103 V/m between them, if their
potential difference is 15.0 kV? (OpenStax 19.16) 3.33 m
8. The voltage across a membrane forming a cell wall is 80.0 mV and the membrane is 9.00 nm thick. What is the electric
field strength? (The value is surprisingly large, but correct.) You may assume a uniform electric field. (OpenStax 19.18)
𝟖. 𝟖𝟗 × 𝟏𝟎𝟔 V/m
9. Membrane walls of living cells have surprisingly large electric fields across them due to separation of ions. What is the
voltage across an 8.00 nm–thick membrane if the electric field strength across it is 5.50 MV/m? You may assume a uniform
electric field. (OpenStax 19.19) 44.0 mV
10. A doubly charged ion is accelerated to an energy of 32.0 keV by the electric field between two parallel conducting plates
separated by 2.00 cm. What is the electric field strength between the plates? (OpenStax 19.22) 𝟖. 𝟎𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟓 V/m
11. An electron is to be accelerated in a uniform electric field having a strength of 2.00 × 106 V/m . (a) What energy in keV is
given to the electron if it is accelerated through 0.400 m? (b) Over what distance would it have to be accelerated to
increase its energy by 50.0 GeV? (OpenStax 19.23) 800 keV, 25.0 km
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-07 Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge and Equipotential Lines Name: _____________________________
Electric Potential of a Point Charge
𝑘𝑞
𝑉=
𝑟
V is __________________ the __________________ potential
V __________ the potential difference if a test charge were ______________ to a distance of r from
__________________
Two or more charges
o Find the __________________ due to __________________ charge at that location
o __________________ the potentials together to get the __________________ potential
Two charges are 1 m apart. The charges are +2 μC and -4 μC. What is the potential 1/3 of the way between them?
How much work is done (−𝑊 = 𝑃𝐸𝑓 − 𝑃𝐸0 ) to bring two electrons to a distance of 5.3 × 10−11 m to the nucleus of a Helium
atom (𝑞 = 3.2 × 10−19 𝐶)?
Equipotential Lines
Lines where the electric __________________ is the __________________
Perpendicular to __________________
No ________________ is required to move charge along __________________ line since 𝑞𝛥𝑉 = 0
Sketch the equipotential lines in the vicinity of two opposite charges, where the negative
charge is three times as great in magnitude as the positive.
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics 08-07 Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge and Equipotential Lines Name: _____________________________
Homework
1. What is an equipotential line? What is an equipotential surface?
2. Explain in your own words why equipotential lines and surfaces must be perpendicular to electric field lines.
3. Can different equipotential lines cross? Explain.
4. Imagine that you are moving a positive test charge along the line between two identical point charges. With regard to the
electric potential, is the midpoint on the line analogous to the top of a mountain or the bottom of a valley when the two
point charges are (a) positive and (b) negative? Explain.
5. The potential at a point in space has a certain value, which is not zero. Is the electric potential energy the same for every
charge that is placed at that point? Explain.
6. What is the potential 0.530 × 10–10 m from a proton (the average distance between the proton and electron in a hydrogen
atom)? (OpenStax 19.25) 27.2 V
7. (a) A sphere has a surface uniformly charged with 1.00 C. At what distance from its center is the potential 5.00 MV? (b)
What does your answer imply about the practical aspect of isolating such a large charge? (OpenStax 19.26) 1.80 km
8. How far from a 1.00 μC point charge will the potential be 100 V? At what distance will it be 2.00 × 102 V? (OpenStax
19.27) 90.0 m, 45.0 m
9. What are the sign and magnitude of a point charge that produces a potential of –2.00 V at a distance of 1.00 mm?
(OpenStax 19.28) −𝟐. 𝟐𝟐 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟑 C
10. In nuclear fission, a nucleus splits roughly in half. (a) What is the potential 2.00 × 10−14 m from a fragment that has 46
protons in it? (b) What is the potential energy in MeV of a similarly charged fragment at this distance? (OpenStax 19.30)
𝟑. 𝟑𝟏 × 𝟏𝟎𝟔 V, 152 MeV
11. (a) What is the potential between two points situated 10 cm and 20 cm from a 3.0 μC point charge? (b) To what location
should the point at 20 cm be moved to increase this potential difference by a factor of two? (OpenStax 19.34) 𝟏𝟑𝟓 × 𝟏𝟎𝟑 V,
∞
12. (a) Sketch the equipotential lines near a point charge +q.
Indicate the direction of increasing potential. (b) Do the same
for a point charge –3q. (OpenStax 19.36)
13. Sketch the equipotential lines for the two equal positive
charges shown in the figure. Indicate the direction of increasing
potential. (OpenStax 19.37)
14. The figure below shows the electric field lines near two charges 𝑞1 and 𝑞2 , the first
having a magnitude four times that of the second. Sketch the equipotential lines
for these two charges, and indicate the direction of increasing potential.
(OpenStax 19.38)
15. Sketch the equipotential lines a long distance from the charges shown in the
figure below. Indicate the direction of increasing potential. (OpenStax 19.39)
Created by Richard Wright – Andrews Academy To be used with OpenStax College Physics
Physics
Unit 8: Electric Forces and Electric Fields