Chapter 12 Notes
Chapter 12 Notes
ELECTROSTATICS
12.1 COULOMBSLAW
What is Electric Charge?
- An intrinsic property of protons and
electrons, which make up all matter,
is electric charge.
- A proton has a positive charge, and
an electron has a negative charge.
Where
k= Coulombs constant
k=
EXAMPLE 1
What is the electrostatic force between
two positive charges? [q1 = 4 C, q2
= 8 C, r = 10 cm]
ANSWER
= (8.99 x 10^9) (4 x 10^-6) (8 x 10^6) / (0.1)^2
= 28.8 N
EXAMPLE 2
Forces F1 and F2 act independently on
test charge (q0). Find Fnet
[q1 = 2 C, q2 = 5 C, q0 = 4 C ]
EXAMPLE 3
Three point charges are arranged as shown in the
figure below. (Take q1 = 5.46 nC, q2 = 4.95 nC, and
q3 = -2.97 nC.)
ANSWER
a) F=kq1q2 / r^2 (k=9 x 10^9, q=charge of particle, r=distance
between particles)
Force due to q1:
F1=(9 x 10^9)(5.46 x 10^-9)(4.95 x 10^-9) / (0.3)^2
F1 = 2.7027 x 10^-6 N to the left since repulsive force
Force due to q3:
F2=(9 x 10^9)(4.95 x 10^-9)(2.97 x 10^-9) / (0.1)^2
F2 = 1.323 x 10^-5 N downwards since attractive force
) To find magnitude, use pythagorean theorem
F^2 = (2.7027 x 10-6)^2 + (1.323 x 10-5)^2
F = 1.35 x 10-5 N
EXAMPLE 4
Assume that a hydrogen atom consists
of an electron of charge e- orbiting a
proton of charge e+. Calculate the
ratio of the electrostatics force
between the electron and proton to
the gravitational force between
them. (Mass of electron,
m=9.1x10^-31 kg, mass of proton,
m=1.67x10^-27 kg)
EXAMPLE 1
The figure shows three ink drops in a bubble-jet printer
that have the same mass but different charge entering a
uniform electric field E with the same velocity v
perpendicular to the electric field. Sketch the paths of
the particles in the electric field. Explain for the
differences in the paths.
ANSWER
Where
is the angle between the field and the unit
vector that is perpendicular to the surface
Is there a difference in the net flux through the cube between the
two situations?
We start from
The electric field is given by
The problem has spherical symmetry, therefore use a
sphere as the Gaussian surface
Since E is radial, its dot product with the differential area
vector, which is also radial, is always one
Also E is the same at every point on the surface of the
sphere
For these reasons, E can be pulled out from the integral
and what remains is
Gaussian Surfaces
Electric Field of
Conducting Sphere
EXAMPLE 1
ANSWER
a) Use
= (1x10^-7)/(4 x 8.85x10^-12 x
(0.015)^2)
=4 x 10^6 V m^-1
b) E = 0
EXAMPLE 2
ANSWER
EXAMPLE 3
ANSWER
Using T cos 30 = mg
T sin 30 = qE = q(/2)
tan 30 = (q)/(2mg)
= 5 x 10^-9 C m^-2
Effect of a neighbouring
conductor
EXAMPLE 1
ANSWER