Coulombs Law Powerpoint
Coulombs Law Powerpoint
Coulombs Law Powerpoint
Chapter 21
Coulombs Law
Magic?
(a) The two glass rods were each rubbed with a
silk cloth and one was suspended by thread.
When they are close to each other, they repel
each other.
Coulombs Law
Electric Charge
(a) Two charged rods of the same sign repel each
other.
(b)
Coulombs Law
Materials classified based on their ability to move charge
2.
3.
2.
3.
Coulombs Law
positive
negative
neutral
positive or neutral
negative or neutral
positive
negative
neutral
positive or neutral
negative or neutral
remember
the ball is a
conductor!
2.
3.
4.
5.
2.
3.
4.
5.
While the conductors are connected, positive charge will flow from the
blue to the green ball due to polarization. Once disconnected, the
charges will remain on the separate conductors even when the rod is
removed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +
+ ++
+ +
++
+
+
++
+
+ ++
Conductor
Nonconductor
+ +
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +
+ + +
Q
+
+ +
+ +
+
+
+
Q/2
+ +
Q/2
+ +
1.0 N
1.5 N
2.0 N
3.0 N
6.0 N
F1 = 3N
F2 = ?
1.0 N
1.5 N
2.0 N
3.0 N
6.0 N
F1 = 3N
F2 = ?
The force F2 must have the same magnitude as F1. This is due to
the fact that the form of Coulombs Law is totally symmetric with
respect to the two charges involved. The force of one on the other
of a pair is the same as the reverse. Note that this sounds
suspiciously like Newtons 3rd Law!!
3/4 N
3.0 N
12 N
16 N
48 N
F1 = 3N
F1 = ?
Q
4Q
Q
Q
F2 = ?
F2 = ?
3/4 N
3.0 N
12 N
16 N
48 N
F1 = 3N
F1 = ?
Q
4Q
q1q2
F
K
3N
2
Originally we had: 1
r
4q1 q2
q1q2
4K 2 =4F1=12N
2
Now we have: F1 K
r
r
which is 4 times bigger than before.
Q
Q
F2 = ?
F2 = ?
9F
3F
F
1/3 F
1/9 F
r
Q
3r
9F
3F
F
1/3 F
1/9 F
F/9
r
Q
3r
q1q2
Originally we had: F K 2
r
q1q2
q1q2 1
K
= F
Now we have:
2
2
9r
9
3r
which is 1/9 as big as before.
F/9
+4Q
3R
+4Q
3R
+Q
4
2R
R
3R
+Q
2R
R
3R
q0 q
The force on Q0 due to +Q is:
r2
q0 4q 4 q0 q
F K
K
F
2
2
4
The force on Q0 due to +4Q is:
2r
r
F K
Coulombs Law
1
FE
r
FE
FE q1q2
q1q2
r2
1 q1q2
FE
4 o r 2
q1q2
FE ko 2
r
Coulombs Law
F12
q1 (+)
F32
q2 (-)
q3 (+)
q3 q2 q1q2
ko 2 2
r12
r32
q3 (+)
q1 (+)
q2 (-)
+2Q
+Q
d
+4Q
3
4
5
+2Q
+Q
d
+4Q
+2Q
+4Q
3
4
5
+Q
1.
2.
3.
4.
3R
+Q
1.
2.
3.
4.
3R
Coulombs Law
Coulombs law describes the electrostatic force
(or electric force) between two charged particles. If
the particles have charges q1 and q2, are separated
by distance r, and are at rest (or moving only
slowly) relative to each other, then the magnitude
of the force acting on each due to the other is
The electrostatic force on particle 1
given by
can be described in terms of a unit
q1 q2
1 q1 q2
F k 2
r
4 0 r 2
where 0 = 8.85 10-12 C2/Nm2 is the permittivity constant. The ratio 1/40 is
often replaced with the electrostatic constant (or Coulomb constant)
k=8.99109 N.m2/C2. Thus k = 1/40 .
Coulombs Law
The electrostatic force vector acting on a
charged particle due to a second charged
particle is either directly toward the second
particle (opposite signs of charge) or directly
away from it (same sign of charge).
If multiple electrostatic forces act on a particle,
the net force is the vector sum (not scalar sum)
of the individual forces.
Coulombs Law
Multiple Forces: If multiple electrostatic forces act on a particle, the net force is
the vector sum (not scalar sum) of the individual forces.
Shell Theories: There are two shell theories for electrostatic force
Charge is Quantized
Electric charge is quantized (restricted to certain values).
The charge of a particle can be written as ne, where n is a positive or negative
integer and e is the elementary charge. Any positive or negative charge q that
can be detected can be written as
q ne where n 1, 2, 3,K
in which e, the elementary charge, has the approximate value
Charge is Quantized
When a physical quantity such as charge can have only discrete values
rather than any value, we say that the quantity is quantized. It is
possible, for example, to find a particle that has no charge at all or a
charge of +10e or -6e, but not a particle with a charge of, say, 3.57e.
Answer: -15e
Charge is Conserved
The net electric charge of any isolated system is always
conserved.
If two charged particles undergo an annihilation process,
they have equal and opposite signs of charge.
e e
If two charged particles appear as a result of a pair
production process, they have equal and opposite signs of
charge.
e e
A photograph of trails of bubbles left in a bubble chamber by an electron and a positron.
The pair of particles was produced by a gamma ray that entered the chamber directly from
the bottom. Being electrically neutral, the gamma ray did not generate a telltale trail of
bubbles along its path, as the electron and positron did.
Charge is Conserved
Nuclei contain positively charged protons and neutral neutrons. Nuclei are
characterized by the number of protons and neutrons they contain.
Charge is Conserved
The notation for a particular nucleus of element X is written:
Examples:
Masses and charges of atomic particles:
Alpha Decay
240
94
Pu 42 He 236
92 U Q
Q= mX mY m c 2
Alpha Decay
When a nucleus decays by emitting an alpha particle, it loses two protons
and two neutrons, Symbolically:
A
Z
Y 24 He Q
A-4
Z-2
Th 42 He 4.3MeV
234
90
- Decay e- emission
The basic process in beta decay converts a neutron into a proton and
an electron:
1
0
n 11 p -10 e e
Y -10 e e Q
A
Z 1
p 01 n +10 e e
Y +10 e e Q
A
Z 1
Gamma Decay
Gamma Decay
A gamma ray is emitted when an excited nucleus returns to its ground
state. Nuclei may become excited through alpha or beta decay, leading
to a sequence such as this one:
n 238
92 U
239
92
U*
239
92
Summary
Electric Charge
Coulombs Law
Conservation of Charge
The net electric charge of any isolated
system is always conserved.
Eq. 21-4