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UCF PHY 2049C - Introductory Physics for Scientists and Engineers (

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Introductory Physics for Scientists and Engineers (II)PHY2049Beatriz Roldán CuenyaDepartment of Physics, University of Central Floridahttp://physics.ucf.edu/~roldanBook: University Physics (Vol 2), Young and Freedman, 12thed.Chapter 21 – Electric Charge and Electric Field- Electric Charge- Conductors, Insulators and Induced Charges- Coulomb’s Law- Electric Field and Electric Forces- Electric Field Calculations- Electric Field Lines- Electric Dipoles1. Electric ChargeElectrostatics: interaction between electric charges that are at rest. Two + charges and two – charges repel each other.+ charge and – charge attract each other.Electric Charge and the Structure of MatterStructure of atoms: electron (-)proton (+) neutron (uncharged) Combinations of quarks (±1/3 e, ±2/3 e  e = electron charge) = Nucleus-Electrons (-) held within atom by attractive forces from (+) nucleus.- Protons & neutrons held by an attractive interaction: strong nuclear force (short range) >> electric repulsion of protons.- Magnitude of charge of electron = magnitude of charge of proton.- Neutral atom: # of electrons = # of protons.- Atomic number: # of protons or electrons in a neutral atom.- Ion: atom that has lost (+) or gained (-) one or more electrons.- Ionization: process of gaining or loosing electrons.Conservation of charge: the sum of all electric charges in any closed system is constant.- The magnitude of charge of the electron / proton = unit of charge.- Conductor: material that permits electric charge to move easily from one region to other. Ex. Cu- Insulator: material that does not permit easy movement of charge. Ex: nylon.- Semiconductor: electrical properties intermediate between conduc. & insulat.2. Conductors, Insulators and Induced Charges-/- Repulsion - / + AttractionCharging by Induction:Electrons move freely, and charge can be inducedElectric forces on uncharged objects:- A charged object can exert forces on uncharged objects.- Polarization: slight shifting of charge within the molecules of a neutral insulator when a charged object is placed in its proximity.The motion of static charges about a plastic comb and light bits of paper can cause attractive forces strong enough to overcome the weight of the paper.3. Coulomb’s Law- The magnitude of the electric force between two point charges is directlyproportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to thesquare of the distance between them. Unit of electric charge: Coulomb (1 C)e ~ 1.602 x 10-19CUnit of electric current (charge per unit time): Ampere (A)k = 1/(4πε0) ~ 9 x 109N m2/C2ε0= 8.854 x10-12C2/ N m2Principle of superposition of forces: when two charges exert forces simultaneously on a third charge, the total force acting on that charge is the vector sum of the two forces that the two charges would exert individually.4. Electric Field and Electric Forces- A single charge creates an electric field(E) in the surrounding space. This fieldcannot exert a net force on the chargethat created it.-The electric force on a charged objectis exerted by the electric field created byother charged objects.Electric field (E) at P: electric force experienced by a test charge q0at P, divided by the charge q0.This definition ignores the force exerted by q0on the charge distribution of the object of charge Q. To be more rigorous, q0 must be very small  take limit when (q0 0)Electric field of a point charge:- E is not a single vector quantity but a vector field (can vary from point to point).- Uniform field: magnitude and direction of E are constant within a certain region.- Electrostatic situation: when charges arenot in motion.- In electrostatics, the electric field at everypoint within the material of a conductor must be zero (does not need to be zero in a holehole inside the conductor).- If there were E inside conductor it will exert a force on every charge, giving them net motion (not electrostatic situation).- The electric field of a point charge always points away from a (+) charge but towarda (-) charge.5. Electric Field CalculationsSuperposition of electric fields (generated by point charges):......3020103210+++=+++= EqEqEqFFFF...321000+++== EEEqFEElectric field at P (on q0) generated by point charges q1, q2, q3, …Linear charge density: λ (charge per unit length (C/m)Surface charge density: σ (charge per unit area (C/m2)Volume charge density: ρ (charge per unit volume (C/m3)6. Electric Field Lines- Imaginary line in a region of space so that its tangent at any point is in the direction of E at that point.- The spacing of electric field lines indicates the magnitude of E.- Electric field lines never intersect  at a point, E has a unique direction.- The magnitude of E is different at different points of a field line.- Electric field lines are not trajectories of charged particles. (E, F, a tangentto field line, but in a curved path, a cannot be tangent to path).7. Electric Dipoles- Pair of point charges with equal magnitudeand opposite sign.-The electric dipole moment (p) is directedfrom the (-) to the (+) charge.Force and Torque on an Electric Dipole:- The net force on an electric dipole in an uniform electric field is zero F+ and F- have same magnitude (qE) but opposite direction and their net sum is zero.- The net torque is not zero.Fr×=τ( ) ( )( )qEdFdFrFrϕϕτsin2sin2====−⊥+⊥Same torque magnitude for F+ and F-, same direction.()()qEdnetϕτsin=Electric dipole moment: p = q dUnits: C mEp×=τPotential Energy of an Electric Dipole:ϕϕϕτdpEddW sin−==( )12coscossin21ϕϕϕϕϕϕpEpEdpEW −=−=∫21UUUW−=∆−=ϕcospEEpU −=⋅−=Potential energy of a dipole in an electric fieldWork done by a torque during dφ  negative sign because torque is in the direction of decreasing


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