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Electric Forces and Fields. AP PHYSICS B - Ch.18. Origins: The Ancient Greeks Found Amber. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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  • Electric Forces and Fields.AP PHYSICS B - Ch.18.

  • Many myths surround the origin of amber. Ovid writes that when Phaeton, a son of Phoebus, the sun, convinced his father to allow him to drive the chariot of the sun across the sky for a day, he drove too close to the earth, setting it on fire. To save the earth, Jupiter struck Phaeton out of the sky with his thunderbolts and he died, plunging out of the sky. His mother and sister turned into trees in their grief but still cried mourning him. Their tears, dried by the sun, are amber. The Greeks called amber elektron, or sun-made, perhaps because of this story, or perhaps because it becomes electrically charged when rubbed with a cloth and can attract small particles. Homer mentions amber jewelry - earrings and a necklace of amber beads - as a princely gift in the Odyssey. Another ancient writer, Nicias, said that amber was the juice or essence of the setting sun congealed in the sea and cast up on the shore. Amber ranges in age from 30 to 50 Million years old. Origins: The Ancient Greeks Found Amber.

  • The ancient Greeks did not perform any quantitative Electricity experiments. Today we know that:Electric forces hold atoms and molecules together. Electrical impulses control our thinking, feeling, muscles, and metabolic processes. Electronics determine much of our current technology.

  • Electric ChargesEvidence for electric charges is everywhere.(static electricity and lightning)Objects may become charged by contact and frictional forces. (clothes in dryer)Benjamin Franklin (1700s) discovered that there are two types of charges:(positive charge and negative charge)Franklin also discovered the Rules of Charge. (like charges repel and unlike charges attract)Electric charge was found to be conserved and quantized. (Franklin, late 1700s and Millikan, early 1900s)

  • Classes of MaterialsCONDUCTORS are materials in which charges may move freely (Cu, Hg, Ag, Au, Al, Fe).

    INSULATORS are materials in which charges cannot move freely (rubber, plastic, wood, glass).

    SEMICONDUCTORS are materials in which charges may move under some conditions (e.g. Si, Gd, Ge, Y).

  • 1706 - 1790Famous Quotations: 1. Haste makes waste.2. Never leave til tomorrow which you can do today.3. A penny saved is a penny earned.4. The sleeping fox catches no poultry. And lesser known ones 1. Come to class with the knowledge of the day before. 2. If you cant calculate what youre talking about, you dont know what youre talking about.

  • Charles Coulomb Measured the Force Between Charged Objects. (q1 q2) d2F = k k = 9 x 109 N m2/C2Charles Coulomb1736-1806

  • Electric charge is quantized. The fundamental unit of charge is the charge on one electron or one proton: 1e- = 1.602 x 10-19 Coulombs

    Millikans Oil-Drop ExperimentRobert Millikan 1900, while a professor at the University of Chicago

  • Two Ways to Measure Electric Field Strength 1. Using a test charge q0 to probe the field.2. Coulombs Law. (they agree)FE = F q0dE = k Q d2

  • Electric Field lines always point away from the positive and toward the negative.

  • Electric Charges in AtomsAtoms consist of a nucleus containing positively charged protons.The nucleus of an atom is surrounded by an equal number of negatively charged electrons.The net charge on an atom is zero.An atom may gain or lose electrons, becoming an ion with a net negative or positive charge.Polar molecules have zero net charge but their charges are unevenly distributed in space (e.g. water).

  • Charges and the EarthThe earth acts as a near-infinite source or sink of charges, and therefore its net charge cannot easily be changed.

    Any conductor in contact with the earth is said to be GROUNDED and cannot receive a net charge. (principle of lightning rod)

  • Induced ChargeCharged objects brought close to a conductor may cause charge to redistribute (polarize the conductor).

    If a polarized conductor is momentarily grounded, charge will be transferred to/from the earth, and it may be left with a net charge (by INDUCTION).

    Objects may be charged byconduction (requires contact with another charged object.induction (requires no contact with another charged object).

  • Benjamin Franklin determined that there are only 2 types of charge.Rubber Rod - NegativeGlass Rod - PositiveUnlike Charges Attract.

  • LIKE CHARGES REPEL.

  • Charging an Object by Induction Which Involves No Contact but Includes Grounding.

  • Charging by Induction (no contact with charged object)Charged RodTwo Metal Spheres (Polarized)

  • Charged RodTwo Metal Spheres(separated)

  • Charges Redistribute, and we have Two Charged Metal Spheres.Another way

  • Charged Rod One Metal Sphere(polarized)

  • The Opposite Method

  • The Theory About How an Insulator Works.

  • What happens if q0 is larger than a test charge?+q0 >> q0

  • Field Lines Always Point Away from the Positive and Toward the Negative.

  • The Electric Field Around Two Unlike Charges.

  • The Electric Field Around Two Like Charges.

  • Electric Field Lines: Conventions Positive Point Charge Negative Point Charge

  • Electric field linesLines of force

  • An Electric Field Can Accelerate a Charged Particle.RESULT: Charge on a proton = 1.6x10-19 C

  • This could occur in Millikans Oil-drop Experiment.RESULT: Elementary unit of charge = charge on an electron = -1.6x10-19 C

  • Setting-up a Capacitor.+ + + + + + + + ++ + + + + + + - - - - - - - - - - - - -QVQC = VEVE = d

    VW = qV

  • The Effect of Adding an Insulator to a Capacitor.insulator

  • Three Different Types of Capacitors.

  • A Stud-Finder is Really a Capacitor.

  • A Water Molecule.

  • Water Molecules in an Electric Field.No Electric Field.Electric Field, Eo

  • Magnetite: From Magnesia (Turkey). Formula: Fe3O4. Description: Dark grey, slightly shiny. Magnetite is naturally magnetic. It is also called Lodestone. In Middle Ages, pilots were called lodesmen. The lodestar is the Polar star, the leading star by which mariners are guided. The name probably comes from Magnesia, but there is a fable of Magnes, a Greek shepherd, who discovered magnetite when the nails in his shoes stuck to the ground!