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Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential
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Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Jan 05, 2016

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Harold Shepherd
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Page 1: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Chapter 18 Pretest

Capacitance and Potential

Page 2: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates, B) the conducting material of the plates, C) the distance separating the plates, D) the insulating material between the plates.

Page 3: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates, B) the conducting material of the plates, C) the distance separating the plates, D) the insulating material between the plates.

Page 4: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

2. Dielectric strength: A) indicates the potential gradient a material will withstand without being punctured by a spark discharge, B) is a dimensionless quantity, C) is directly related to the amount of space needed between capacitor plates, D) uses a vacuum as the standard of comparison.

Page 5: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

2. Dielectric strength: A) indicates the potential gradient a material will withstand without being punctured by a spark discharge, B) is a dimensionless quantity, C) is directly related to the amount of space needed between capacitor plates, D) uses a vacuum as the standard of comparison.

Page 6: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

3. Two point charges of 4.3 μC and 5.6 μC are separated by 0.50 m. What is the electrical potential energy of this two charge system?

Page 7: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

PE = k q1 q2 / d

F = (9 x 109)(4.3 x 10-19)(5.6 x 10-19)/(0.5)

PE = 0.43344 JThe charges are the same so the energy is positive.

Page 8: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

4. A uniform field is 600 N/C and is directed straight up from the ground. The potential at a distance of 20 m above ground is 4500 V. What is the potential 8 m above ground?

Page 9: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Ed = V, so the potential difference between 20 m and 8 m is 600 x 12 = 7200 V. Since the field is directed upward, the potential must be 7200 V higher at 8 m: 4500 + 7200 = 11700 V.

Page 10: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

5. What is the potential at a distance of 0.5 m from a point charge of 7.0 μC?

μμ

Page 11: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

V = k q / dV = (9 x 109)(7.0 x 10-6) / 0.5

V = 126000 V

Page 12: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

6. A 0.50 μF capacitor is connected to a 12 V battery. What charge is stored on the capacitor?

μμ

Page 13: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

q = VCq = 12 x 0.5 = 6 μCor

q = 12(0.5 x 10-6)= 6 x 10-6 C

Page 14: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

7. A 0.25 μF capacitor is connected to a 9.0 V battery. How much potential energy is stored on the capacitor?

Page 15: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

PEE = ½ CV2

PEE = ½ 0.25(9)2

PEE = 10.125 μJor,PEE = ½ (0.25x 10-6)(9)2

PEE = 1.0125 x 10-5 J

Page 16: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

1. Compare electric potential and electrical potential difference.

Page 17: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Electric potential and electrical potential difference are the same.

Page 18: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

I meant to ask you to compare electric potential ENERGY and electrical potential difference.

Electrical potential difference is electric potential energy divided by charge.

Page 19: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

2. Two capacitors, 0.200 μF and 0.500 μF, are connected in parallel and charged to a potential difference of 80.0 V. What is the total charge acquired?

Page 20: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Total capacitance of capacitors in parallel is the sum of the capacitances.

CT = 0.2 + 0.5 = 0.7 μF q = VCq = 80 x 0.7 = 56 μCor

q = 80(0.7 x 10-6)= 5.6 x 10-5 C

Page 21: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

3. The capacitors of Item 2 are discharged and connected in series. A charge of +50.0 μC is transferred to the ungrounded terminal. Calculate the total potential difference across the two capacitors.

Page 22: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,

Total reciprocal of the capacitance of capacitors in series is the sum of the reciprocals of the capacitances.

1/CT = 1/0.2 + 1/0.5 1/CT = 5 + 2 1/CT = 71/CT = 1/7 μF 50 μC = V(1/7 μF)

350 V = V

Page 23: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,
Page 24: Chapter 18 Pretest Capacitance and Potential. 1. The amount of charge that can be placed on a capacitor does not depend on: A) the area of the plates,