static electricity

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Static Electricity

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Page 1: Static electricity

Static Electricity

Page 2: Static electricity

History• Electron means “amber” in Greek

• Thales of Miletos 600 BC discovered properties by Greek.

• He rubbed amber (mineral) with cat fur and attracted feathers.

Page 3: Static electricity

Ben Franklin’s Kite Experiment (1740’s)

Page 4: Static electricity

Benjamin Franklin

• 1740’s lightning experiment with kite, key and Leyden jar (stores static electricity).

• Franklin developed the lightning rod.

• Proposed conservation of charge.

• Saw electricity as a flowing fluid and called the flow direction positive.

Page 5: Static electricity
Page 6: Static electricity

Law of Charges

• Like charges repel

• Opposite charges attract

Page 7: Static electricity

Law of Conservation of Electrical Charge

• The net charge of an isolated system remains constant.

Page 8: Static electricity

Electrical Charge

• Symbol: q

• Unit : Coulomb, C

Page 9: Static electricity

Charge and Mass of the Electron

• Charge of Electron:

1.6 x 10-19 C (Coulombs)

• Mass of Electron:

9.11 x 10-31 kg.

Page 10: Static electricity

Positively charged

objects lost electrons.

Example: Rubbing a glass rod with silk. • Rod becomes + (loses electrons)• Silk becomes - (gains electrons). 

Page 11: Static electricity

Negatively charged objects have gained electrons.

Example: rubbing a rubber rod with fur. • Rubber Rod: - charged• Fur: + charged

Page 12: Static electricity

Types of Materials in terms of Electrical Conductivity

• Conductors (metals)

• Semiconductors (germanium, silicon)

• Insulators (wood, glass, rubber)

Page 13: Static electricity

Electrostatic Charging Methods

• Friction

• Conduction

• Induction

Page 14: Static electricity

Charging by Friction

• The two objects wind up with opposite charges.

Page 15: Static electricity

Charging by Conduction (direct contact)

• The objects end up with the same type charge.• If the charges are equal in size, they share the charge

equally.

http://www.ap.smu.ca/demonstrations/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=106&Itemid=85

Page 16: Static electricity

Charging by Induction

• Objects ends up with opposite charge.• Involves grounding.

http://www.physics.sjsu.edu/becker/physics51/elec_charge.htm

Page 17: Static electricity

Electroscopes are used to test the charge of an object.

Page 18: Static electricity

When a charged object is brought near the electroscope,

its leaves spread apart.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ec/Electroscope_showing_induction.png

Page 19: Static electricity

When a charged object touches an electroscope, the

electroscope is now charged.

Page 20: Static electricity

What was the charge of the object that touched this

electroscope?

Page 21: Static electricity

Polarization

http://www.csiro.au/helix/sciencemail/activities/WaterBend.html

Page 22: Static electricity

Part II

• Coulomb’s Law

Page 23: Static electricity

Coulomb’s Law

• 1785,Charles Augustin Coulomb (French scientist)

F = k q1q2

______

d2

• k = 9 x 109 Nm2/C2

• d (or r): distance between the charges.• q : charge of each object.

Page 24: Static electricity

The Direction of the Electrical Force

Page 25: Static electricity

Coulomb’s Law is an Inverse Square Law

http://web.ncf.ca/ch865/graphics/Coulomb.jpeg