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Review of Work

Review of Work. Work Done on a Point Charge by a Point Charge. Potential Energy and Potential of Point Charges. Potential Energy and Potential of Many Point Charges. Relationship between Force, Field, Energy, Potential. Potential Surfaces. SI Units. Field and Potential Graphs.

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Review of Work

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  1. Review of Work Work Done on a Point Charge by a Point Charge Potential Energy and Potential of Point Charges Potential Energy and Potential of Many Point Charges Relationship between Force, Field, Energy, Potential Potential Surfaces SI Units Field and Potential Graphs Electric Power

  2. Δr F Definition of Work Work is defined as the amount of force acting over a distance. The unit of work is either Joules (J) or electron-volts (eV) φ

  3. y Δw Δh1 x Δh2 Example of Work The following is an example of the work done by gravity on a mass. m

  4. F (N) 1 A1 0 X (m) -1 A2 1 2 0 Example of Work This is an example using the the fact that integrals are areas under a curve.

  5. Definition of a Conservative Force A force is conservative if the work it does on an object is zero when the object moves along a path and returns to its initial position. Examples of conservative forces are gravity, elastic force, electricity and magnetism. The following are not conservative: friction, tension, normal force.

  6. y 2 1 Δh1 x 3 Δh2 5 4 Example of a Conservative Force Gravity as a mass is raised and lowered m WTOTAL = 0

  7. 2 y 1 ΔL1 3 x ΔL2 5 4 Δw Example of a Non-conservative Force Friction on a block that is moving around a table m WTOTAL = - fs (2ΔL1 + 2ΔL2 + 2Δw )

  8. Consider the work necessary to put together two point charges. The force is given by Coulomb’s Law. The work needed to bring one charge from infinity to within a distance r12 of the other is Don’t worry about the integral in the last equation. It is only there so that those who know calculus can see where the other part came from.

  9. Since , then we see that The potential energy held between these two point charges is then Now we consider the same relationship, but with electric field instead of force. This we call the potential.

  10. What if there are more point charges? 1 1 2 2 3 3

  11. 1 1 Example 2 2 3 3

  12. What about potential? 1 1 2 2 3 3

  13. 1 1 Example 2 2 3 3

  14. Relationship between Work, Potential Energy, Force and Potential The table below represents the fundamental equations of electricity all of which a derived from the electric field E.

  15. A surface is an equipotential surface if the electric potential at every point on the surface is the same. As charges move on an equipotential surface the electric force does no work. The electric field at a point is always perpendicular to the equipotential surface on which the point lies. The electric field always points in the direction of decreasing potential. Java Applet This Applet can be found at http://www.slcc.edu/schools/hum_sci/physics/tutor/2220/e_fields/java/

  16. Common SI Units in Electricity

  17. Relationship Electric Potential and Electric Field The electric field is the slope of the electric potential. slope of this line is -E V s

  18. Relationship Electric Potential and Electric Field The electric potential is the area under the curve of electric field. positive area E s negativearea

  19. What is electric power? Power is the change in work over time We will use this latter when we reach the topic in circuits.

  20. Review of Work Work Done on a Point Charge by a Point Charge Potential Energy and Potential of Point Charges Potential Energy and Potential of Many Point Charges Relationship between Force, Field, Energy, Potential Potential Surfaces SI Units Field and Potential Graphs Electric Power

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