Transcript ppt
From last time(s)…
Gauss’ law
Conductors in electrostatic equilibrium
Today…
Oct. 2, 2008
Finish conductors in electrostatic equilibrium
Work, energy, and (electric) potential
Electric potential and charge
Electric potential and electric field.
1
Exam 1 Scores
Class average = 76%
(This is 84/110)
Your score posted
at learn@uw
Curve:
B / BC boundary is 76%
Oct. 2, 2008
2
Conductor in Electrostatic
Equilibrium
In a conductor in electrostatic equilibrium there is no net motion
of charge
E=0 everywhere inside the conductor
Ein
Etot =0
Conductor slab in an external field E:
if E 0 free electrons would be
accelerated
These electrons would not be in
equilibrium
When the external field is applied, the
electrons redistribute until they
generate a field in the conductor that
exactly cancels the applied field.
Etot = E+Ein= 0
Oct. 2, 2008
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Conductors: charge on surface
only
Choose a gaussian surface inside (as close
to the surface as desired)
E=0
There is no net flux through the gaussian
surface (since E=0)
Any net charge must reside on the surface
(cannot be inside!)
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E-Field Magnitude and Direction
E-field always surface:
Parallel component of E would put force on
charges
Charges would accelerate
This is not equilibrium
Apply Gauss’s law at surface
E this surface
E EA
E || this surface
E 0
Oct. 2, 2008
E 0
Tot
E EA
Qencl A
E /o
this surface
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Summary of conductors
E 0everywhere inside a conductor
Charge in conductor is only on the surface
E
surface of conductor
---
Oct. 2, 2008
++
+
+
++
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Electric forces, work, and energy
Consider positive particle charge q, mass m at rest
in uniform electric field E
Force on particle from field
Opposite force on particle from hand
Let particle go - it moves a distance d
How much work was done on particle? W Fd qEd
1 2
K.E.
mv W qEd
How fast is particle moving?
2
v=0
Oct. 2, 2008
+
v>0
+
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Work and kinetic energy
Work-energy theorem:
Change in kinetic energy of isolated
particle = work done
dW F ds Fdscos
Total work
end
K
end
dW F ds
start
start
In our case, F qE
Oct. 2, 2008
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Electric forces, work, and energy
Same particle, but don’t let go
F qE
Move particle distance d, keep speed ~0
How much work is done by hand on particle? W Fd qEd
What is change in K.E.
of particle? K.E . 0
How much force does hand apply?
Conservation of energy? W stored in field as potential energy
+
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+
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Work, KE, and potential energy
If particle is not isolated,
Wexternal K U
Work done
on system
Change in
kinetic energy
Change in
electric potential energy
Works for constant electric field if U qE r
Only electric potential energy difference
Sometimes a reference
point is chosen
E.g. U r 0 at r (0,0,0)
Then U r qE r for uniform electric field
Oct. 2, 2008
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Electric potential V
Electric potential difference V is the electric
potential energy / unit charge = U/q
For uniform electric field,
U r qE r
V r
E r
q
q
This is only valid for a uniform electric field
Oct. 2, 2008
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Quick Quiz
Two points in space A and B have electric potential
VA=20 volts and VB=100 volts. How much work
does it take to move a +100µC charge from A to
B?
A. +2 mJ
B. -20 mJ
C. +8 mJ
D. +100 mJ
E. -100 mJ
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Check for uniform E-field
Push particle against E-field, or across E-field
Which requires work?
+
Increasing electric
potential in this direction
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Constant electric potential
in this direction
+
Decreasing electric
potential in this direction
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Potential from electric field
dV E d
Potential changes
largest in direction of V V d
o
E-field.
Smallest (zero)
E
perpendicular to
E-field
d
V Vo E d
d
V=Vo
V Vo E d
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Electric potential: general
U
F
Coulomb
ds
qE ds q E ds
Electric potential energy difference U
proportional to charge q that work is done on
U /q V Electric potential difference
E ds
Depends only on charges that create E-fields
Electric field usually created
by some charge
distribution.
V(r) is electric potential of that charge distribution
V has units of Joules / Coulomb = Volts
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Electric potential of point charge
kQ
Electric field from point charge Q is E 2 rˆ
r
What is the electric potential difference?
V
end
r final
E ds
start
k
Define V r 0
Oct. 2, 2008
Q
k
dx
2
rinitial r
r final
Q
Q
Q
k
k
r rinitial
rinital
rfinal
Then
Q
V r k
for point charge
r
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Electric Potential of point charge
Potential from a point charge
Every point in space has a
numerical value for the electric
potential
kQ
V
r
y
+Q
x
Distance from ‘source’ charge +Q
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U=qoV
Point B has greater potential
energy than point A
Means that work must be done
to move the test charge qo
from A to B.
This is exactly the work to
overcome the Coulomb
repulsive force.
F
Electric potential energy=qoV
Potential energy, forces, work
B
Work done = qoVB-qoVA =
Coulomb
d
B
A
qo > 0
A
Differential form: qodV FCoulomb d
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V(r) from multiple charges
Work done to move single charge near charge distribution.
Other charges provide the force, q is charge of interest.
U
q1
q2
q
q1
Fq 2 Fq 3 ds
U q1 r1 U q 2 r2 U q 3 r3
q1q
q2q
q3 q
k
k
k
r
r
r
q1
q2
q3
qk k k
r
r
r
q3
Superposition of
individual
electric potentials
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F ds F
qVq1 r Vq 2 r Vq 3 r
V r Vq1r Vq 2 r Vq 3 r
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Quick Quiz 1
At what point is the electric potential zero for this
electric dipole?
A
x=-a
+Q
x=+a
B
-Q
A. A
B. B
C. Both A and B
D. Neither of them
Oct. 2, 2008
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Superposition:
the dipole electric potential
x=-a
Superposition of
• potential from +Q
• potential from -Q
x=+a
+Q
-Q
+
=
V in plane
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