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Electric Field [Autosaved]

Jan 20, 2016

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Page 1: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 2: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Electric

Force Electric

FieldElectric

Potentia

l

Energy

Electric

Potentia

l

Electric

Potential

Differenc

eElectric

Dipoles

Page 3: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 4: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Is the energetic region of space surrounding a charged object.

• Exist at a point if a force of electrical origin is exerted on charged object place at the point

• A vector quantity

• Its direction is the same as the direction of the force on a positive test charge

Page 5: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Test Charge (qo )

• Serves as test charge for determining the extent to which the surrounding charges generates a force

• In using this, its value in terms of magnitude should be very small,

Page 6: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Symbol: E

E = Fe / qo = kqqo / r2 / qo

Unit: N/C or V/m

E = kq / r2

Page 7: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 8: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Characteristics:

*Always directed away from positive charges and directed toward negative charges

Page 9: Electric Field [Autosaved]

*Provides information on the magnitude or strength of the field

- near the charge, E is strongest, electric field lines are closer

- far from charge, E is weaker, electric field lines are spread out

Page 10: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 11: Electric Field [Autosaved]
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Characteristics:

*Do not start and stop in midspace

*The number of electric field lines leaving the positive charge or entering the negative charge is proportional to the magnitude of the charge.

*Can never cross each other

Page 13: Electric Field [Autosaved]
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*Consider the electric field (E) produced by two or more charged particles. From the Principle of Superposition, it states

The electric field due to two or more point charges is the vector sum of the individual contributions to the field produced by each charge separately.

Page 15: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 16: Electric Field [Autosaved]

E = kq ȓ

r2

E = k Σ qi ȓi

r2 i

Page 17: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Two charges q1 =+2.0 x 10-8 C and q2 = 3.0 x 10-8 C are 50 mm apart. What is the electric field halfway between them?

Page 18: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Of a system of point charges – defined on the work that has to be done by an external agent to assemble this system of charges by bringing them to their present positions from infinity.

Page 19: Electric Field [Autosaved]

EPE = W = Fr = kqqo r = kqqo

r2 r

Page 20: Electric Field [Autosaved]
Page 21: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Defined as the ratio of the potential energy (EPE) of a small test charge qo situated at that point divided by the charge itself

Page 22: Electric Field [Autosaved]

V = EPE = kqqo = kq

qo r2qo r

Symbol: V Unit: J/C V (Volt)

Page 23: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Two protons in a nucleus of U248 are 6.0 x 10-10 m apart. What is their mutual potential energy?

Page 24: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• The potential difference VAB between two points A and B is defined as the ratio between the work that must be done to take a charge q from A and B and the value of q.

Page 25: Electric Field [Autosaved]

VA – V B = EPEB – EPEA = WAB

qo qo

VA – V B = Δ(EPE) = WAB

qo qo

Page 26: Electric Field [Autosaved]

VA – V B = = WAB

qo

WAB = qo (VA – V B )

Symbol: V

Unit: J/C =

V (Volt)

Page 27: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• One electron volt is the charge in potential energy of an electron (q 1.6 x 10 C) when the electron moves through a potential difference of one electron.

• One electron volt =

• (1.60 x 10-19 C)(1.00 V) = 1.60 x 10-19 Joule• 1 Volt (eV) = 1.6 x 10-19 Joule

Page 28: Electric Field [Autosaved]

Equipotential Surface• A surface in which the electric potential is

the same everywhere. The easiest equipotential surfaces to visualize are those that surround on the isolated point charge. Whenever r is the same, the potential is the same and the equipotential surfaces are spherical surfaces centered on the charge. No work is required to move a charge at constant speed on an equipotential surface.

Page 29: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• A pair of point charges with equal magnitude and opposite sign(a positive charge +q and a negative charge –q) separated by a distance d. Example: water

Page 30: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Magnitude of the product of the charges q and the separation d

• Symbol: p

p=qd

Page 31: Electric Field [Autosaved]

The net force on an electric dipole in a uniform external field is zero.

τ=pEsinϕ

τ=qE (dsinϕ)

U=-pE

PE for a dipole in an electric field.

Magnitude of torque in an electric dipole

Page 32: Electric Field [Autosaved]

• Calculate the electric dipole moment of an electron and a proton 4.30 nm apart.

Page 33: Electric Field [Autosaved]