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Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

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Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.
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Page 1: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Do Now (8/26/13):

Welcome!

1.Find your seat

2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Page 2: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Brainstorm:

1.What does the word “charge” make you think of?

2.What is the definition of the word “static”?

3.Describe the parts and structure of an atom.

Page 3: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Chapter 20Static

Electricity

Page 4: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Intro

• Syllabus

• Course outline

• BPI webpage

• Vocab

Page 5: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electrostatics•The study of

charges that can be collected and held

in one place

Page 6: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

With your “elbow partner” come up with examples where charge differences build up in nature, and describe the

consequences

Page 7: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge•Caused by an

electron imbalance as electrons move

Page 8: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Atomic Charge•In neutral atoms

the number of electrons = the

number of protons

Page 9: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge•Opposite charges

attract & like charges repel

Page 10: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge Conservation•electric charge can

neither be created nor destroyed.

Page 11: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge•The charge of an

object leaks off into water

molecules in air

Page 12: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge•Charged objects eventually return to their neutral

state

Page 13: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge•Holding a charge is easy on dry days & difficult on humid

days

Page 14: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Conductors•Materials like

metals that allow electrons or

charges to move

Page 15: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Common Conductors

•Copper, silver, gold, aluminum, &

graphite

Page 16: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Insulators•Materials that will not allow electrons or charges to move

easily

Page 17: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Common Insulators

•Glass, dry wood, plastic, rubber, &

dry air

Page 18: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electron Sink•Anything that can

absorb lots of electrons

Page 19: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Common Electron Sinks•People, Earth, etc

Page 20: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electroscope•A device used to

detect electrical charge

Page 21: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge Redistribution•Conduction•Induction

Page 22: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge by Conduction

•Charge by touching a charged body to a

neutral body

Page 23: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge by Induction

•Charge by moving a charged body

near a neutral body

Page 24: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Charge Separation on Neutral Objects

- - - + - - - + - - - + - + - + - + + + - + + + - + + +

Page 25: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Do Now (8/27/13):

• Complete the pre-lab

Page 26: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Do Now (8/28/13):

• Complete the Drill sheet

Page 27: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electrical Force•Force caused by the

attraction or repulsion of charges

Page 28: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electrical Force•Electrical force must be much greater than

gravitational force

Page 29: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Coulomb’s Law•Force between charges

is proportional to charge & inversely

proportional to distance between charges

Page 30: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Coulomb’s Law

F qAqB

Page 31: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Coulomb’s Law

F 1d2

Page 32: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Coulomb’s Law

F qAqB

d2

Page 33: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Fe Formula

Fe = KqAqB

dAB2

Page 34: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electric Constant

K = 9.0 x 109 Nm2

C2

Page 35: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Identify another formula that is very

similar to the electrical force

formula

Page 36: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Gravity Formula

Fg = GmAmB

dAB2

Page 37: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

The magnitude of the force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance

Page 38: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Calculate the electrical force occurring when a ball with a charge of 2.0 x 10-8 C is 12 mm from

another ball with a charge of -3.0 x 10-8 C:

Page 39: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Calculate the electrical force occurring when a ball with a charge of 3.0 x 10-4 C is 12 mm from

another ball with a charge of -6.0 x 10-6 C:

Page 40: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Millikens Oil Droplet

Experiment

Page 41: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Electron Charge

1.60 x 10-19 CC = Coulombs

Page 42: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Calculate the force between 2 electrons8.0 x 10-3 nm apart:

Page 43: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Calculate the force between the electron

& the nucleus of hydrogen:

4.0 x 10-2 nm apart:

Page 44: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Do Now (8/29/13):

• Complete the Drill sheet

Page 45: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Do Now (8/30/13):

• Complete the Drill sheet

Page 46: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

A

B C

dAB = 4.0 mmdBC = 3.0 mm

qA = - 4.0 x 10-5 CqB = 3.0 x 10-5 CqC = 9.0 x 10-5 C

Calculate: Fe on B

Page 47: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

A

B C

dAB = 4.0 mmdBC = 3.0 mm

qA = - 4.0 x 10-5 CqB = 3.0 x 10-5 CqC = 9.0 x 10-5 C

Calculate: Fe on A

Page 48: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

A

B C

dAB = 4.0 cmdBC = 3.0 cm

qA = 3.0 x 10-5 CqB = 3.0 x 10-5 CqC = 6.0 x 10-5 C

Calculate: Fe on C

Page 49: Do Now (8/26/13): Welcome! 1.Find your seat 2.Write your name on the notecard on your desk.

Calculate the force between 2 particles1.2 x 10-3 m apart:

q1 = 4.0 x 10-5Cq2 = - 4.0 x 10-5C


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