Physics 213 General Physics Lecture 3. 2 Last Meeting: Electric Field, Conductors Today: Gauss’s...

Post on 20-Jan-2016

221 views 0 download

Transcript of Physics 213 General Physics Lecture 3. 2 Last Meeting: Electric Field, Conductors Today: Gauss’s...

Physics 213General Physics

Lecture 3

2

Last Meeting: Electric Field, Conductors

Today: Gauss’s Law, Electric Energy and Potential

Electric Flux

Field lines penetrating an area A perpendicular to the field

The product of EA is the flux, Φ

In general:ΦE = E A cos θ

4

Demo (Flux)

Pivoting rectangle

Electric Flux Through Angled Surfaces

6

7

Demo

Styrofoam ball with toothpicks

8

Gauss’ Law

Gauss’ Law

Gauss’ Law states that the electric flux outward through any closed surface is equal to the net charge Q inside the surface divided by εo

εo is the permittivity of free space and equals 8.85 x 10-12 C2/Nm2

The area in Φ is an imaginary surface, a Gaussian surface, it does not have to coincide with the surface of a physical object

insideE

o

Q

Electric Field of a Charged Thin Spherical Shell

The calculation of the field outside the shell is identical to that of a point charge

The electric field inside the shell is zero

2eo

2 r

Qk

r4

QE

11

Electric Field of a Nonconducting Plane Sheet of Charge

02

Electric Field of a Nonconducting Plane Sheet of Charge, cont.

The field must be perpendicular to the sheet

The field is directed either toward or away from the sheet

Parallel Plate Capacitor

The device consists of plates of positive and negative charge

The total electric field between the plates is given by

The field outside the plates is zero

o

E

Conductors in Electrostatic Equilibrium

When no net motion of charge occurs within a conductor, the conductor is said to be in electrostatic equilibrium

An isolated conductor has the following properties:

1. The electric field is zero everywhere inside the conducting material.

2. Any excess charge on an isolated conductor resides entirely on its surface.

3. The electric field just outside a charged conductor is perpendicular to the conductor’s surface.

4. The charge accumulates at locations where the radius of curvature of the surface is smallest (that is, at sharp points).

Property 3

The electric field just outside a charged conductor is perpendicular to the conductor’s surfaceConsider what would

happen it this was not true

The component along the surface would cause the charge to move

It would not be in equilibrium

16

In a conductor electrons are free to move. If a conductor is placed into E, a force F = -eE acts on each free electron.  Soon electrons will pile up on the surface on one side of the conductor, while the surface on the other side will be depleted of electrons and have a net positive charge.  These separated negative and positive charges on opposing sides of the conductor produce their own electric field, which opposes the external field inside the conductor and modifies the field outside.

Electrons inside the conductor experience no force.

Lightning Rod Effect

Any excess charge moves to its surface

The charges move apart until an equilibrium is achieved

The amount of charge per unit area is greater at the flat end

The forces from the charges at the sharp end produce a larger resultant force away from the surface

Why a lightning rod works

18

Demo

Van de Graaff Generator

Van de GraaffGenerator

Charge is transferred to the dome by means of a rotating belt

20

Work and Potential Energy

There is a uniform field between the two plates

As the charge moves from A to B, work is done on it

W = Fd=q Ex (xf – xi)

ΔPE = - W

= - q Ex x

Only for a uniform field

22

23

24

25

[V] = volt