Electric Fields
Electric Fields
Electric Fields
ELECTRIC FIELDS
23.1 PROPERTIES
OF
ELECTRIC CHARGES
(i) Charges of the same sign repel one another and charges with opposite signs
attract one another.
(ii) Electric charge is always conserved in an isolated system.
(iii) Electric charge always occurs as integral multiples of a fundamental amount of
charge e. In modern terms, the electric charge q is said to be quantized, where q
is the standard symbol used for charge as a variable. That is, electric charge
exists as discrete packets, and we can write q = Ne, where N is some integer.
Fe
(1.1)
(1.2)
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Or simply
Experiments also show that the electric force, like the gravitational force, is
conservative.
The SI units:
Charge q is the coulomb (symbol: C).
Force F is Newton (symbol: N)
Distance r is meter (symbol: m)
The smallest unit of free charge e known in nature, the charge on an electron ( -e)
or a proton (+e), has a magnitude:
The charges and masses of the electron, proton, and neutron are given in Table
23.1.
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force on each other that is given by Coulombs law. The force F21
exerted by q2 on q1 is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction
the electric field due to the source charge at the location of the test charge to
be the electric force on the test charge per unit charge, or, to be more specific,
the electric field vector
Fe
acting on a positive test charge qo placed at that point divided by the test
charge
(1.3)
as shown in Figure 1.2 is the direction of the force acting on a positive test
separate from the test charge; it is not the field produced by the test
(ii)
charge itself.
The existence of an electric field is a property of its source; the
presence of the test charge is not necessary for the field to exist.
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(1.4)
This equation gives us the force on a charged particle q placed in an electric field.
If q is positive, the force is in the same direction as the field. If q is negative,
the force and the field are in opposite directions.
To determine the direction of an electric field, consider a point charge q as a
source charge. This charge creates an electric field at all points in space
surrounding it. A test charge qo is placed at point P, a distance r from the source
charge. According to Coulombs law, the force exerted by q on the test charge is
(1.5)
Using equation (1.3), then
(1.6)
Figure 1.3 shows the directions of the forces acting by a positive or negative
source charges, and hence the direction of the electric fields due to these
charges.
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Figure 1.3 (a), (c) When a test charge q 0 is placed near a source
charge q, the test charge experiences a force. (b), (d) At a point P
near a source charge q, there exists an electric field.
Figure 23.19 The electric field lines for a point charge. Notice that
the figures show only those field lines that lie in the plane of the
page.
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OF
CONTINUOUS
Introduction:
(I) Differentiation versus integration:
dq and so on.
dx
together,
l,
the linear
(1.7)
where has units of coulombs per meter (C/m).
(b) If a charge Q is uniformly distributed on a surface of area A, the surface
charge density (Greek letter sigma) is defined by:
(1.8)
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(1.9)
where has units of coulombs per cubic meter (C/m3).
(d) If the charge is nonuniformly distributed over a volume, surface, or line, the
amounts of charge dq in a small length, surface, or volume element are:
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(2)
(3)
elements at a point P.
We evaluate the total electric field at P due to the charge distribution by
summing (integrating) the contributions of all the charge elements.
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Lets assume the rod is lying along the x axis, dx is the length of one small
segment, and dq is the charge on that segment. Because the rod has a charge per
unit length , the charge dq on the small segment is dq = dx.
Find the magnitude of the electric field at P due to one segment of the rod having
a charge dq:
Noting that ke and = Q/l, are constants and can be removed from the integral,
evaluate the integral:
(a)
(b)
Figure 23.16 (Example 23.7) A uniformly charged ring of radius a.
(a) The field at P on the x axis due to an element of charge dq. (b)
The total electric field at P is along the x axis. The perpendicular
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dE
perpendicular to the
axis. Figure 23.16b shows the electric field contributions from two segments on
opposite sides of the ring. Because of the symmetry of the situation, the
perpendicular components of the field cancel. That is true for all pairs of
segments around the ring, so we can ignore the perpendicular component of the
field and focus solely on the parallel components, which simply add.
Evaluate the parallel component of an electric field contribution from a segment
of charge dq on the ring:
All segments of the ring make the same contribution to the field at P because
they are all equidistant from this point. Integrate to obtain the total field at P:
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This result shows that the field is zero at x = 0. Furthermore, notice that
Equation (3) reduces to
keQ /x2
if
x >> a, so the
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Figure 23.20 The electric field lines for two point charges of equal
magnitude and opposite sign (an electric dipole).
Figure 23.21 The electric field lines for two positive point charges.
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The electric field lines for a point charge +2q and a second point
charge 2q.
IN A
If E is uniform (that is, constant in magnitude and direction), the electric force
on the particle is constant and we can apply the particle under constant
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acceleration model to the motion of the particle. If the particle has a positive
charge, its acceleration is in the direction of the electric field. If the particle has
a negative charge, its acceleration is in the direction opposite the electric field.
Example 23.9 An Accelerating Positive Charge: Two Models
A uniform electric field E is directed along the x axis between parallel plates of
charge separated by a distance d as shown in Figure 23.23. A positive point charge
q of mass m is released from rest at a point next to the positive plate and
accelerates to a point next to the negative plate.
(A) Find the speed of the particle at by modeling it as a
particle under constant acceleration.
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If E is uniform (that is, constant in magnitude and direction), the electric force
on the particle is constant and hence the particle moves under constant
acceleration.
If the particle has a positive charge, the electric force and its acceleration are in
the direction of the electric field. If the particle has a negative charge, the
electric force and its acceleration are in the direction opposite to the electric
field.
(A)
(B)
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