Transcript Electricity

Electricity
Ch. 11
Electric Charge
• All matter is made of atoms
• Atoms contain 2 charged
particles—what are they?
• These charges produce
attractive and repulsive forces
Electrical Force
• This is the force between 2
charged objects
• Size of the force is determined
be two things:
• Size of the charges involved
• How close the charges are to one
another
Electric field
• This is where the charges
interact with one another
• An active area where protons
are constantly being pulled
together or pushed apart
How can neutral atoms
be charged?
• Atoms start with an equal
number of protons and
electrons
• It must gain or lose electrons to
become charged
• There are three ways to
accomplish this:
• Friction, Conduction, and
Induction
Charge by Friction
• Rub a balloon on your head:
• What happens?
• Why?
Charge by Conduction
• Touch a plastic ruler to a metal
rod:
• What happens?
• Why?
Charge by Induction
• You rub a balloon against your
head and then stick it on a wall
• What happens?
• Why?
What Produces
Electrical Current?
• Electrical current is produced
by electrical pressure
• Electrons push against one
another from one side
• This causes a repulsive force
• This pressure is referred to as
voltage
Voltage Equation
• Potential Energy
Charge
The stronger the battery, the
greater the potential energy
This equals more voltage
Controlling Electric
current
• Different electrical sources
need different amounts of
current
• This is controlled with resistors
• These control the amount of
current that is passed from a
power source to the energy
source (light, appliance, etc.)
Ohm’s Law
• States the relationship between
current, voltage, and resistance
• Current =
Voltage
Resistance
*Current is proportional to voltage
*And is inversely related to
resistance
What does this mean?
1. The higher the voltage, the
larger the current and vice
versa
2. The greater the resistance the
smaller the current
Sample Problem
• How much current flows
through a lamp with a
resistance of 60 ohms when the
voltage across the lamp is 12
Volts?
Algebra Anyone?
• What is the resistance of an
electric frying pan that draws a
current of 12 amps when
connected to a 120 volt circuit?
• (HINT: Use the same equation,
but solve for a different
variable. You must get
resistance by itself.)