charging by induction. have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on...

7
Charging by Induction

Upload: camron-lamb

Post on 29-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

Charging by Induction

Page 2: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the balloon gains a static charge because of the rubbing. You also know that opposite charges attract each other. However, the wall is neutral. How does the balloon stick to it?

Page 3: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

Induced Charged Separation

• Rubbing a balloon against your sweater makes it negative.

• The wall is neutral (+ve = -ve)• Bringing the –ve balloon close to the wall will

cause the electrons in the balloon to repel the electrons in the wall.

• This is known as induced charge separation.

Page 4: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

Figure 1 shows how induced charge separation allows a negatively charge balloon to stick to a neutral wall.

Page 5: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

• Induced charge separation leaves a +ve charge on the surface of the wall.

• This temporary charge is an example of charging by induction.

• A portion of the neutral object (the wall) was charged by brining another charged object (the balloon) close to it.

Page 6: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

Grounding• You can return any charged object to neutral

by adding or removing electrons.• Large objects like the Earth can gain or lose

electrons and remain neutral because the charges are spread over a huge area.

• The process of removing charges from objects by contact with a large, neutral object is called grounding.

• Figure 3.

Page 7: Charging by Induction. Have you ever been able to stick a balloon onto a wall after rubbing it on your sweater? How is this possible? You know that the

So, Why the Shock?

• As you walk across the carpet, your socks and the carpet rub together giving your socks – and you – a negative charge – Charging by friction

• The metal door knob is a conductor– electrons can move easily inside it

• As your hand approaches the door knob, the electrons “jump” to it– Grounding via the doorknob