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10.3 Flashlights 10.3 Flashlights
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10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

10.3 Flashlights10.3 Flashlights

Page 2: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Observations About Observations About FlashlightsFlashlights• They turn on and off with a switch

• More batteries usually means brighter

• Orientation of multiple batteries matters

• Flashlights dim as batteries age

Page 3: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

A BatteryA Battery• Battery “pumps” electrons from + end to - end (inside the battery)

– Chemical potential energy is consumed– Electrostatic potential energy is produced

• In the battery:The current undergoes a rise in voltage– Alkaline cell: 1.5 volt rise– Lead-acid cell: 2.0 volt rise– Lithium cell: 3.0 volt rise

• Chain of cells produces larger voltage rise

Lemon Lemon batterybattery

Page 4: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.
Page 6: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

A Light BulbA Light Bulb• Filament barely lets charge flow through it

– Electrostatic potential energy is consumed– Thermal energy is produced– It’s a resistor!

• Current undergoes a drop in voltage– Two-cell alkaline flashlight: 3.0 volt drop

Ramp with Ramp with nailsnails

Page 7: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

A Simple A Simple CircuitCircuit• A battery – the energy

source• A wire – the outgoing

current path• A light bulb – the

energy destination (the load)

• A wire – the return current path

Page 8: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Voltages Add:Voltages Add:

Page 9: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.
Page 10: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

The most confusingThe most confusing

thing about circuitsthing about circuits• Current is + charges moving• Really, negative charges move in the

opposite direction• We say that current flows in the direction of movement of positive charge

Page 11: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Clicker Question:Clicker Question:

If you remove the 2 batteries from a working flashlight and reinstall them backward so that they make good contact inside, will the flashlight still work?

A. YesB. No

FlashlightFlashlight

Page 12: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

CurrentCurrent• Current measures the electric charge passing

through a region per unit of time• Current is measured in coulombs/second or

amperes (amps)• Electric fields cause currents to flow

++ +

+ +

E

Page 13: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

currentcu

rren

tcurrent

Page 14: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Resistance of materialsResistance of materialsResistance of Resistance of coppercopperResistance and Resistance and temp.temp.Coil, bulb, LN2Coil, bulb, LN2

Page 15: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Circuits 1 Circuits 1 • Steady current requires a circuit path (loop)

– Charge mustn’t accumulate anywhere– Closed conducting loop avoids accumulation

• Steady current flow requires energy– Currents lose energy (and voltage) in

conductors– Missing energy becomes thermal energy– Lost energy must be replaced

Page 16: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Circuits 2Circuits 2

• A circuit can transport energy– Current obtains energy from a battery– Current delivers energy to a light bulb– Current starts the trip over again

Page 17: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Short CircuitsShort Circuits• If a conducting path

bridges the load– Current bypasses the

load– Circuit is abbreviated

or “short”• No appropriate energy

destination (load)• Energy loss and heating

occurs in the wires• A recipe for fires!

Page 18: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

• The currents passing through most wires and other devices experience voltage drops

• In an “ohmic device,” the voltage drop is proportional the current:

voltage drop = resistance · current V = I × R

where resistance is a constant for the device

Ohm’s Law (V=I x R)Ohm’s Law (V=I x R)Ramp with Ramp with nailsnails

Page 19: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.
Page 20: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Click me

Series and parallelSeries and parallel

FuseFuse

Page 21: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Clicker Question:Clicker Question:Why can a bird safely stand on a power

line?A. The bird does not make a complete

circuit with the power line – it would have to have each leg on different lines.

B. Power lines are insulated.C. The resistance of the bird is much

higher than the power line.

Page 22: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Power isPower is• Energy per unit of time• Measured in joules/second or watts• Current times voltage in a circuit:

P = I × V• Batteries are power sources• Loads are power consumers

Note that since P = I x V and V = I x R, P = I2 x R: Higher current means more power (for fixed R)!

Page 23: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Battery Power (P)Battery Power (P)• Current (I): units of charge pumped /sec• Voltage (V) rise: energy /unit of charge• power produced = current x voltage rise

(P = I × V )

• Current (I): units of charge passed /sec• Voltage (V) drop: energy taken /unit charge• power received = current x voltage drop (P = I × V)

Load Power (P)Load Power (P)

Page 24: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

Important ideas from this lectureImportant ideas from this lecture• Current is + charges moving; electrons move in

the opposite direction• A battery “pumps” charges by giving them

energy• A complete circuit requires a closed path; a

switch opens and closes a path for current• Electrons give up energy to a “load” (resistor)• Ohm’s law: V = I R• Power: P = I V or P = I2 R

Page 25: 10.3 Flashlights. Observations About Flashlights They turn on and off with a switch More batteries usually means brighter Orientation of multiple batteries.

See you next class!

For next class: Read Section 11.1