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Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging
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Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Electricity & Magnetism

Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena

Methods of Charging

Page 2: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Today’s Topics

• Why study electromagnetism

• Some electrostatic phenomena– Chapter 21: [21.1, 21.2]

Page 3: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Lightning

Page 4: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Properties of Charge

Page 5: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Elementary Electrostatics

• Rubbing a balloon on a wool jumper makes the balloon attract your hair

• The balloon is said to be “charged” or to have an “electric charge”

• Similarly glass rubbed with silk/fur will become “charged”

• Charged glass will attract a charged balloon• Two charged balloons will repel each other

Page 6: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Experiments Show….

• Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)– Two types of charge

• Charles Coulomb (1736-1806)– Coulomb’s Law

• Robert Milikan (1868-1953)– Quantisation (1909)

Page 7: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Properties of Charge: Two types of charge

• Arbitrarily named –Positive (+ve) e.g. glass

–Negative (-ve) e.g. wax & rubber

Page 8: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Like Charges Repel …

+ve+ve +ve+ve

-ve -ve -ve-ve

Page 9: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

& Opposites Attract…

+ve -ve+ve -ve

Page 10: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Properties of Charge: Charge is Quantised

• Whenever we measure the amount of charge we get a value that is an integer multiple of a unique number e

• q = N e

Charge Integer

Fixed number

Page 11: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Properties of Charge: Charge is always conserved

– Charge is never created or destroyed

– The process of “charging” is really “moving” charge from one place to another

Page 12: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

QuizWhy does your hair stand on end in a lightning storm?

Page 13: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Quiz

• A: more than before rubbing?

• B: the same as before?

• C: less than before?

Rub a balloon on your hair, the balloon attracts you hair. Is the total amount of charge in the balloon and in your hair ...

Page 14: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Equipment and methods of Charging

Page 15: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

The ElectroscopeUsed to detect and crudely measure charge

Page 16: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Earthing

The Earth is a practically limitless supply (or sink) of charge

Page 17: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Van de Graf Generator

Page 18: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Different Methods for Charging

• Friction– e.g. rubbing a balloon with wool

• Conduction– e.g. touching an electroscope

• Induction– e.g. balloon sticking to a wall

Page 19: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Charging by Friction

When two different insulators are rubbed together, electrons can be transferred from one insulator to the other. The body which has gained electrons has a negative charge and the one which lost electrons has a positive charge of equal magnitude.This process is called charging by friction.

Page 20: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Charging by Conduction

Page 21: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

InductionBalloon on wall

Wall is neutral and an insulator

+ve Charges move slightly towards balloon

-ve Charges move slightly away from balloon

Wall is still neutral but surface has small residual charge, sufficient to hold baloon

Page 22: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Charging an Electroscope by Induction

Page 23: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Induction to Charge Object

Page 24: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Quiz

• A: the water moves away from the rod

• B: the water doesn’t move

• C: the water moves towards the rod

If a positively charged rod is brought near a trickle of water the water moves towards it. What happens if we use a negatively charged rod?

Page 25: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Quiz

• a: A is positive• b: A is negative• c: A is neutral• d: not enough information

Object A attracts object B. If we know that B is positively charged what can we say about A?

Page 26: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Experiments and applications of Static Electricity

• Milikan’s Oil Drop experiment

• The Van de Graaff Generator

• The electrostatic Painting

• Photocopies and Laser Printers

Page 27: Electricity & Magnetism Lecture 1: Basic Phenomena Methods of Charging.

Summary: Lecture 1

• Equipment and Techniques– Electroscope “Measures

charge”

– Earthing Earth as a limitless supply or sink of charge

– Van de Graaff Generator “Generates charge”

• Introduced the concept of charge

• Properties of charge– Two types +ve & -ve

• Like repel

• Opposites attract

– Charge always conserved

– Charge quantised

• Methods of charging– Friction

– Conduction

– Induction