1 / 13

Electric Charges

Electric Charges. Protons have a + charge Electrons have a – charge Neutrons have no electric charge The protons and electrons of an atom are attracted to each other. They both carry an electrical charge. ELECTRIC CHARGES.

anevay
Télécharger la présentation

Electric Charges

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Electric Charges • Protons have a + charge • Electrons have a – charge • Neutrons have no electric charge • The protons and electrons of an atom are attracted to each other. They both carry an electrical charge

  2. ELECTRIC CHARGES • Positive charge of the protons and the negative charge of the electrons are equal. • ELECTRIC CHARGE MOVES FROM ONE ATOM TO ANOTHER.

  3. What causes static electricity? • When materials are rubbed against each other electrons are pulled from the surface of one material and relocated on the surface of another • When the atom gains or looses an electron it has an electric charge

  4. Static Electricity • The accumulation of excess charges on an object

  5. Opposites Rule of Static Electricity • opposite charges attract • Like charges repel

  6. Have you noticed that clothes sometimes cling together when removed from the dryer? • While the clothes tumble around, electrons are transferred from fabrics that hold their electrons loosely to those that hold their electrons tightly. • Clothes that gain electrons become negatively charged and cling to clothes that have lost electrons and are positively charged

  7. Law of Conservation of Charge • Charge can be transferred from object to object, but it cannot be created or destroyed.

  8. Conductors and Insulators Conductors Electrons can move easily through conductors. Good conductors : skin, copper, gold, silver Insulators A material that doesn’t allow electrons to move through it easily Good insulators are : plastic, wood, rubber, glass

  9. Transferring Electric Charge • The process of transferring charge by touching or rubbing is called charging by contact. One object will be positively charged and one will be negatively charged.

  10. Charging at a Distance Charging by induction • The rearrangement of electrons on a neutral object caused by a nearby charged object. • An object charged by induction does not loose or gain electrons, the charged object brought near a neutral object repels the electrons of the neutral object

  11. Lightning • Lightning is a large static discharge. A static discharge is a transfer of charge through the air between 2 objects because of the build up of static electricity

  12. Thunder • Lightning also generates powerful sound waves. • The electrical energy in lightning bolts rip electrons off atoms in the atmosphere and produces great amounts of heat. the heat causes the air in the bolts path to expand rapidly, producing sound waves that you hear as thunder

  13. Electroscope • Detects electric charges • 2 thin metal leaves attached to a metal rod • A negatively charged object touches the rod • The leaves repel if they become negatively charged

More Related