1 / 9

The Quantization of Charge

The Quantization of Charge. Hangyu Liu(Roger). Outline. What is quantization of charge? Millikan oil drop experiment and equipment setup The data collection and analysis The conclusion. What is Quantization of Charge?.

remedy
Télécharger la présentation

The Quantization of Charge

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. The Quantization of Charge Hangyu Liu(Roger)

  2. Outline • What is quantization of charge? • Millikan oil drop experiment and equipment setup • The data collection and analysis • The conclusion

  3. What is Quantization of Charge? • In general, the quantization of charge is the principle that the charge of any object is an integer multiple of the elementary charge. For example: 0e, 1e, -1e Yes 0.5e, ½e, -0.9e No

  4. Millikan Oil Drop Experiment • In 1909, R. Millikan reported a reliable method for measuring ionic charge. The main process is to observe the motion of small oil droplets under the influence of an electric field. • It involves three types of motion: gravity fall motion (g); electric field aided downward motion (d); electric field aided upward motion (u).

  5. The Equipment Setup • Webcam • Viewing Scope • Atomizer • Droplet Viewing Chamber • LED Light Source • Platform • Plate Charging Switch • Stopwatch • GadwinPrtSc Constant Velocity

  6. The Data Collection The black lines: gravity fall motion (g) The red lines: electric field aided downward motion (d) The blue lines: electric field aided upward motion (u).

  7. The Data Analysis Thus, for gravity fall measurements (f): Fg=mg=4/3*πr3ρg Fd=6πηeff rv ηeff=η*[1/(1+b/pr)] due to Stokes’ law • Fd=Fg, 4/3*πr3ρg=6πηeff rv, we can find For electric field aided upward motion (u): FE =Fd + Fg , q=(Fd+Fg) /E=[6πηeffrv+4/3* πr3ρg]*s/V For electric field aided downward motion (d): FE =Fd - Fg , q=(Fd-Fg) /E=[6πηeffrv-4/3* πr3ρg]*s/V Figure: free body diagrams of all three cases. The definitions of symbols used: q - charge carried by the droplet s – separation of the plates ρ – density of oil g – acceleration of gravity ηeff - viscosity of air r – the radius of drop v – the velocity of drop V – potential difference across the plates in b – constant, equal to 8.13* 10-8N/m

  8. The Uncertainty of Data • In general, in order to figure out the uncertainty of data, we could measure the same thing for several times. • While in this particular case, we have an upward motion and a downward motion for a same charge, so we just need to get the different values for the same charge and calculate the average difference between them as the uncertainty.

  9. The Conclusion By adjusting the scaling, I found out the value of charge is (1.29+ 0.04)* 10-19 , which is smaller than the expected value 1.6* 10-19 . However, we clearly see the evidence of quantization of charge, so it might be experimental error which I can not figure out.

More Related