Electrostatics
330 likes | 439 Vues
Electrostatics. Fields Refresher Electrical Potential Potential Difference Potential Blame it on the old folks. Electrical Field. Maxwell developed fields Electric fields exist in the space around charged objects
Electrostatics
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Electrostatics Fields Refresher Electrical Potential Potential Difference Potential Blame it on the old folks.
Electrical Field • Maxwell developed fields • Electric fields exist in the space around charged objects • When other charged object enters this electric field, the field exerts a force on the second charged object
Problem Solving Strategy • Draw a diagram of the charges in the problem • Identify the charge of interest • You may want to circle it • Units – Convert all units to SI • Need to be consistent with ke
Electric Field Lines • Electric Field patterns - draw lines in direction of field vector at any point • These are called electric field lines and were introduced by Michael Faraday
Rules for Drawing Electric Field Lines • The lines for a group of charges must begin on positive charges and end on negative charges • In the case of an excess of charge, some lines will begin or end infinitely far away • The number of lines drawn leaving a positive charge or ending on a negative charge is proportional to the magnitude of the charge • No two field lines can cross each other
E Field Lines • Draw E field for a Large Positive Charge • Draw E field for small Positive Charge • Draw E field for Large Neg Charge • Draw E field for small Neg Charge. • Draw E Field for a Dipole (1 pos near 1 neg)
Electric Field Line Patterns • Point charge • The lines radiate equally in all directions • For a positive source charge, the lines will radiate outward
Electric Field Line Patterns • For a negative source charge, the lines will point inward
Electric Field Line Patterns • An electric dipole consists of two equal and opposite charges • The high density of lines between the charges indicates the strong electric field in this region
E Fields • Draw E Field for two + Charges
Electric Field Line Patterns • Two equal but like point charges • At a great distance from the charges, the field would be approximately that of a single charge of 2q • The bulging out of the field lines between the charges indicates the repulsion between the charges • The low field lines between the charges indicates a weak field in this region
E Fields • Draw E Fields for Large +Q and small -q
Electric Field Patterns • Unequal and unlike charges • Note that two lines leave the +2q charge for each line that terminates on -q
Fields Refresher • Start on + or inifinity • End on – or infinity • # field linesmagnitude of charge or field • Dipole = two opposite charges • Fields are everywhere • Fields do not affect everthing.
Fields In Conductors Refresher • Equilibrium Conditions: • ALL excess charge moves to outer surface • E is zero within the conductor • E on surface MUST be to surface
E Field in Conductor Shielding:
Equipotential Surfaces • Electric Potential is the same at all pts. on surface • WAD=? • WAB =? • E field Equipotentials
Electric Potential Energy • Fe is a conservative force (?) • Fe can make electrical potential energy • Fe Work is Independent of Path • WFe = - PE
PE from Fields • Compare to Gravity • PEg=magdy • PE of earth & mass system • PEe=qEd • PE of q & E field System • PEg = PEgo +magdy • often choose PEgo = 0 • PEe=PEeo + qEd
PE from pt Charges Important Note: This relationship for PE is ONLY for PE due to point charges. THIS DOES NOT WORK FOR FIELDS. VanDeGraff & Fluorescent Bulb
Potential Energy & Pt Charges • Sketch the E field vectors inside the capacitor • Sketch the F acting on each charge • Choose a spot for PEe=0 & Label it. • Is the PE of the + charge +, -, 0
Work and Potential Energy • E is uniform btn plates • q moves from A to B • work is done on q • Won q = Fd=qEx x • ΔPE = - W = - q Exx • only for a uniform field
Electric Potential & Pt Charge • In which direction (rt, lft, up, down) does the PE of the + charge decrease? Explain. • In which direction will the + charge move if released from rest? Explain. • Does your last answer agree with the F drawn earlier?
Potential Difference • Voltage = Potential = Electrical Potential • V=PE/q • V measured in ---? • Within E, different PE at Different Pts. • V=VB-VA Potential Difference • V= PE/q • V = qE d/q • V = E d A + B Think about the VanDeGraff demo
Electric Potential of a Point Charge • PEe=0 as r • The potential created by a point charge q at any distance r from the charge is • A potential exists w/ or w/o a test charge at that point
Electric Potential of Multiple Point Charges • Superposition principle applies • Is PEe a vector or a scalar? • The total electric potential at some point P due to several point charges is the algebraic/vectoric? sum of the electric potentials due to the individual charges
Energy and Charge Movements, cont • When the electric field is directed downward, point B is at a higher or lower potential? than point A • A positive test charge that moves from A to B gains/loses? electric potential energy • It will gain/lose? the same amount of kinetic energy as it loses in potential energy
Energy and Charge Movements • A positive charge gains electrical potential energy when it is moved in a direction opposite the electric field • If a charge is released in the electric field, it experiences a force and accelerates, gaining kinetic energy • As it gains kinetic energy, it loses an equal amount of electrical potential energy • A negative charge loses electrical potential energy when it moves in the direction opposite the electric field
Potentials in Practice • Rank the points from largest potential (V) to smallest.
Electrical Potential Energy of Two Charges • V1 is the electric potential due to q1 at point P • The work required to bring q2 from infinity to P without acceleration is q2V1 • This work is equal to the potential energy of the two particle system
Problem Solving with Electric Potential (Point Charges) • Draw a diagram of all charges • Note the point of interest • Calculate the distance from each charge to the point of interest • Use the basic equation V = keq/r • Include the sign • The potential is positive if the charge is positive and negative if the charge is negative
Problem Solving with Electric Potential, cont • Use the superposition principle when you have multiple charges • Take the algebraic sum • Remember that potential is a scalar quantity • So no components to worry about