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Daily Work Organizer. Do Now:. Homework: (2) Reading Log 24: pg 235-236 Due Friday: Signed Progress Report. New HW System. HW is stamped You write the number on the top of the assignment (#1) Reading Log 23
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Daily Work Organizer Do Now: Homework: (2)Reading Log 24: pg 235-236 Due Friday: Signed Progress Report
New HW System • HW is stamped • You write the number on the top of the assignment (#1) Reading Log 23 • Stapleall your HW in order to the back of your Cornell notes at the end of the chapter
Jobs • 1 PowerPoint Master • 2 Graded Work Gurus • 1 Whiteboard Cleaner!
Tuesday Tutoring • Everyone is Welcome! • Mandatoryif your grade is below a C • If you can’t make, you must provide Ms. Gamm with a written or oral explanation.
Static Electricity It’s what we see…
The Point of Cornell Notes • If you don’t review, you would need to spend 40-50 minutes re-learning each hour of material later Without Review, only about 20% of information is remembered after initial memorization Write Questions! • Within 24 hours - spend 10 minutes reviewing • A week later spend 5 minutes to "reactivate" the same material Write the Summary
Charges • Rubbing plastic or glass makes them attract to bits of paper or dust • Same objects charged the same way will repel each other • Some charged objects attract each other
Charges • All charged objects either attract or repel each other • This implies 2 types of charges • Benjamin Franklindecided to call the charge on rubbed glass positive
Electricity • One of the first objects to hold this charge was amber • The Greek word for amber is elektron • Electricity • Electron
Charge • To understand Charge, let’s look at the atom • Protons (nucleus) are positively charged • (repels charged glass) • The electrons are negatively charged • (attracts charged glass)
Charge • Even though protons are much bigger (2,000x’s bigger than electron), the – and + charges are the same size. • If an atom has equal number of electrons and protons the charge is zero. ____? • 3 electrons (blue) and 3 protons (red) • Net charge is zero (neutral charge)
Charge Rules • In order to be charged, an object must have extra protons or electrons • The following facts help understand charges: • In solids, positive charges do not move protons are fixed in place
Charge Rules • In solids, negative charges can move • conductors: electrons move all about material
Charge Rules • In solids, negative charges can move • conductors: electrons easily move about material • insulators: electrons mostly move around atom
Charge Rules In fluids, both protons and electrons can move all around
Charge Rules • Objects want to be neutral. • If given a path to the earth, electrons will flow out until the object is neutral. • This is called grounding. v
Charge by Rubbing • Every atom attracts electrons (e-) a certain amount • When you rub two objects together the object that attracts electrons more will steal e- + −
Charge by Rubbing • This stealer becomes negative (more e-) and the other object becomes positive (lost e-) What will happen to the charge when the bars separate? 4 Electrons 6 Electrons 4 Electrons 2 Electrons
Transferring Charge • This stealer becomes negative (more e-) and the other object becomes positive (lost e-) • Only works if there is contact
Daily Work Organizer Do Now: • Homework: • (3)Reading Log 25: pg248-252 • (4) Finish Activity pg 238-239 • (5) Problems 1-3 Pg 246 • Signed Progress Report
1. Where is the Electrostatic Force greatest? 2. Where is the Electrostatic Force smallest? Q = charge
Retake: Monday 3:15 – 4:15 Test Corrections due Monday
Warning • If you do not return your test to me you get -10 points • All tests mustbe returned by Tuesday
Conduction A charged conductor touches a neutral conductor Total Charge = protons - electrons
Conduction A charged conductor touches a neutral conductor
Conduction A charged conductor touches a neutral conductor The electrons spread out so that the charges on both are equal What will happen to the charge when the conductors separate?
Conduction A charged conductor touches a neutral conductor The electrons spread out so that the charges on both are equal
Visualizing Electric Charge pg 237 Neutral Draw 3 units of charge (protons & electrons) • In each bar
Induction pg237 6 units of charge (protons or electrons) Neutral 9 protons & 9 electronstotal
Conduction pg 238 Initially Neutral 6 units of charge (protons or electrons) What can happen when 2 charged objects touch? Total protons: 6+9 = 15 Total electrons= 9 Difference: 6 protons Charge has to be evenly distributed… How many electrons should each object have? 9 protons total
Charging by induction pg239 6 units of charge (protons or electrons) Neutral Charged objects want to be neutral… How many electrons should enter from the ground? 9 protons & 9 electronstotal
Vocab Charging by Induction • A method used to charge an object without actually touching the object to any other charged object
Vocab Charging by conduction • Electrons are • transferred from one material to another through contact
Induced Polarity • How do charged objects attract neutral objects? • By inducing a charge on the neutral object. • A neutral balloon has no effect on wall’s e- • The neutral wall has e- found randomly around nuclei of the atom
Induced Polarity • Let’s charge the balloon • Now the e- in the wall are being repelled • This leaves the exposed wall acting positive • Negative and positive charges attract each other
Electrostatic Force • Electric Force is 1039 times larger than gravity • Coulomb studied charge with charged metal balls • Let’s look at how the amount of charge on each ball and the distance effect the electrostatic force
Coulomb’s Law • Electrical force is proportional ( ) to both
Coulomb’s Law • These lead to one equation called Coulomb’s Law: Electric Force in Newtons (N) charge in Coulombs (C) distance between centers in meters (m)
Coulomb’s Law • A Newton is about equal to ¼ pound • A Coulomb is the amount of charge in 6.25 x 1018 electrons or protons
ExampleTwo charged spheres, one with 1x1012 extra electrons and one with 2x1012 extra protons are separated by 50 cm. What force do they exert on each other? Given: Want:
Examplesolve for FE - force is attractive
Time to practice Go to pg. 235
Daily Work Organizer Do Now: • Homework: • (7)Reading Log 26: 255-256 • (8) Problems Set 8 • (9)Finish E-field activity 253 • Test Corrections!
Daily Work Organizer Do Now: • Homework: • (7)Reading Log 26: 255-256 • (8) Problems Set 8 • Test Corrections!
Answers • A • C • A • C • E • A • B • A • D • B • A • A • B
If distance is doubled: #3 dfinal= 2dInital FE initial = 12 N
Tutoring After School Today, room 308
Static Electricity Test on Tuesday Why? Because I don’t want you that have to study over Thanksgiving Advice: Finish your Cornell notes over the weekend
Labbettepg 240 Read pg 240 Complete Part 1 with your lab group