Static Electricity: Electric Charge

Description

This note provides an introduction to electric charge, and also covers charging an object by contact and induction. It can be used in conjunction with the mind map on static electricity or as a stand-alone resource.
tatemae.honne
Note by tatemae.honne, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
alex.examtime9373
Created by alex.examtime9373 over 10 years ago
tatemae.honne
Copied by tatemae.honne over 10 years ago
107
0

Resource summary

Page 1

Electric Charge Q = total charge on a body q = charge on an individual particle Indicates if a body has an excess or a deficiency of electrons Scalar quantity Unit: Coulomb (C) 1 Coulomb is the amount of charge that passes any point in a circuit when a current of 1 ampere flows for 1 second Like charges repel each other; unlike charges attract each other

Methods of Charging Charging by contact Charging by induction

Charging by contact Involves the contact of a charged object to a neutral object The substance with a weaker attraction will lose some of its electrons to the other substance Rubbing polythene or Perspex rods with a cotton cloth causes the polythene rod to gain electrons from the cloth, whereas the Perspex loses electrons to it The polythene rod becomes negatively charged The Perspex rod becomes positively charged

Charging by induction If you bring a charged insulator (a negatively charged polythene rod) close to a conductor (a metal sphere on an insulated handle), the charge on the rod will cause the opposite charge to be attracted to it, and the similar charge to be repelled If you then earth the sphere (by touching it), the negative charges will flow to the ground Then, you remove the earth and subsequently the charged rod The positive charges spread out and you are left with a positively charged metal sphere

In this diagram, a positively charged rod is touched against a neutral gold leaf electroscope The positive charges on the rod attract the negative charges and repel the positive charges on the electroscope The negative charges are cancelled out by the positive charges on the rod, leaving everything positively charged The rod is then taken away, leaving a positively charged electroscope

Conductor = any substance through which electric charge can flowInsulator = any substance through which electric charge cannot flow

New Page

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Using GoConqr to teach science
Sarah Egan
AQA Physics P1 Quiz
Bella Statham
GCSE AQA Physics - Unit 3
James Jolliffe
Using GoConqr to study science
Sarah Egan
GCSE AQA Physics 1 Energy & Efficiency
Lilac Potato
Waves
kate.siena
Forces and their effects
kate.siena
Forces and motion
Catarina Borges
Junior Cert Physics formulas
Sarah Egan
OCR Physics P4 Revision
Dan Allibone
P2 Radioactivity and Stars
dfreeman