108 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			108 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
Electric Charges and Fields Part -1
 | 
						||
Electric Field
 | 
						||
Charges are additive in nature.
 | 
						||
q1
 | 
						||
q2 q3
 | 
						||
q1 q2 q3
 | 
						||
Q=
 | 
						||
Q
 | 
						||
++
 | 
						||
Like charges repel;Unlike charges attract
 | 
						||
+
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
+
 | 
						||
+
 | 
						||
} Repel
 | 
						||
Attract
 | 
						||
+ve
 | 
						||
-ve
 | 
						||
Charges
 | 
						||
COULOMB’S LAW
 | 
						||
r
 | 
						||
Fe = kq1q2
 | 
						||
r2
 | 
						||
F21= q1 q2
 | 
						||
r2
 | 
						||
21
 | 
						||
1 4 Ꮛ0
 | 
						||
q1 q2
 | 
						||
k= 1
 | 
						||
4 Ꮛ0
 | 
						||
Ꮛ0 = permittivity of vaccum
 | 
						||
=8.854 x 10-12C 2N-1m2
 | 
						||
Vector form of Coulomb’s Law
 | 
						||
r21 r21= r2-r1
 | 
						||
F21= -F21
 | 
						||
A region around a charged particle or object within which a force would be exerted on other charged particles or objects.
 | 
						||
E=E 1 + E 2 +......+ E n
 | 
						||
= kq 1 /r 1
 | 
						||
2 + kq2 /r 2
 | 
						||
2 +..... + kq n /rn
 | 
						||
2
 | 
						||
It is equal to the electric force per unit experienced by a test charge whi
 | 
						||
The electric field intensity is the measure
 | 
						||
strength of an electric field at any E= =
 | 
						||
F q
 | 
						||
E= k.Q
 | 
						||
d2
 | 
						||
= k.Q
 | 
						||
d2
 | 
						||
k . q. Q/d 2 q/
 | 
						||
/
 | 
						||
Newton / Coulomb
 | 
						||
Electric Field Lines: Properties
 | 
						||
Electric field lines start from a positive charge and end at a negative charge.
 | 
						||
In case of a single charge, electric field lines end at infinity.
 | 
						||
In a charge-free region, electric field lines are continuous and smooth.
 | 
						||
Two electric field lines never intersect or cross each other.
 | 
						||
Electric field lines never form a closed loop because electric field is conservative in nature.
 | 
						||
+_
 | 
						||
+_
 | 
						||
Field lines
 | 
						||
The electric field from an isolated positive charge
 | 
						||
The electric field from an isolated negative charge
 | 
						||
+
 | 
						||
+
 | 
						||
Cable jacket A leg insulator B leg insulator Conductors
 | 
						||
Electrical Conductors Electrical Insulator
 | 
						||
Conductors have free electrons on the surface which allows current to pass through. Insulators don’t.
 | 
						||
Electric charge is quantized.
 | 
						||
Q=n e
 | 
						||
x
 | 
						||
( NC-1)
 | 
						||
The electric field intensity between two points is the vector sum of all the electric fields acting at that point.
 | 
						||
Charge is a conserved quantity.
 | 
						||
Net Charge q=0 (neutral)
 | 
						||
gains 2 electrons loses 2 electrons
 | 
						||
Steel Wood
 | 
						||
Glass Rubber
 | 
						||
Plastic Oil
 | 
						||
Silver Gold
 | 
						||
Sea
 | 
						||
Water
 | 
						||
Copper
 | 
						||
CONDUCTOR
 | 
						||
a
 | 
						||
llows
 | 
						||
the
 | 
						||
energy
 | 
						||
to
 | 
						||
pass
 | 
						||
through
 | 
						||
it
 | 
						||
INSULATOR
 | 
						||
does
 | 
						||
not
 | 
						||
a
 | 
						||
llows
 | 
						||
the
 | 
						||
energy
 | 
						||
to
 | 
						||
pass
 | 
						||
through
 | 
						||
it
 | 
						||
of the point.
 | 
						||
charge
 | 
						||
ch is placed at that point |