Conceptual Questions
1.1 Static Electricity and Charge: Conservation of Charge
There are very large numbers of charged particles in most objects. Why, then, don't most objects exhibit static electricity?
Why do most objects tend to contain nearly equal numbers of positive and negative charges?
1.2 Conductors and Insulators
An eccentric inventor attempts to levitate by first placing a large negative charge on himself and then putting a large positive charge on the ceiling of his workshop. Instead, while attempting to place a large negative charge on himself, his clothes fly off. Explain.
If you have charged an electroscope by contact with a positively charged object, describe how you could use it to determine the charge of other objects. Specifically, what would the leaves of the electroscope do if other charged objects were brought near its knob?
When a glass rod is rubbed with silk, it becomes positive and the silk becomes negative—yet both attract dust. Does the dust have a third type of charge that is attracted to both positive and negative? Explain.
Why does a car always attract dust right after it is polished? Note that car wax and car tires are insulators.
Describe how a positively charged object can be used to give another object a negative charge. What is the name of this process?
What is grounding? What effect does it have on a charged conductor? On a charged insulator?
1.3 Coulomb's Law
Figure 1.41 shows the charge distribution in a water molecule, which is called a polar molecule because it has an inherent separation of charge. Given water's polar character, explain what effect humidity has on removing excess charge from objects.
Using Figure 1.41, explain, in terms of Coulomb's law, why a polar molecule (such as in Figure 1.41) is attracted by both positive and negative charges.
Given the polar character of water molecules, explain how ions in the air form nucleation centers for rain droplets.
1.4 Electric Field: Concept of a Field Revisited
Why must the test charge in the definition of the electric field be vanishingly small?
Are the direction and magnitude of the Coulomb force unique at a given point in space? What about the electric field?
1.5 Electric Field Lines: Multiple Charges
Compare and contrast the Coulomb force field and the electric field. To do this, make a list of five properties for the Coulomb force field analogous to the five properties listed for electric field lines. Compare each item in your list of Coulomb force field properties with those of the electric field—are they the same or different? For example, electric field lines cannot cross. Is the same true for Coulomb field lines?
Figure 1.42 shows an electric field extending over three regions, labeled I, II, and III. Answer the following questions. (a) Are there any isolated charges? If so, in what region and what are their signs? (b) Where is the field strongest? (c) Where is it weakest? (d) Where is the field the most uniform?
1.6 Conductors and Electric Fields in Static Equilibrium
Is the object in a conductor or an insulator? Justify your answer.
If the electric field lines in the figure above were perpendicular to the object, would it necessarily be a conductor? Explain.
The discussion of the electric field between two parallel conducting plates, in this module states that edge effects are less important if the plates are close together. What does close mean? That is, is the actual plate separation crucial, or is the ratio of plate separation to plate area crucial?
Would the self-created electric field at the end of a pointed conductor, such as a lightning rod, remove positive or negative charge from the conductor? Would the same sign charge be removed from a neutral pointed conductor by the application of a similar externally created electric field? The answers to both questions have implications for charge transfer utilizing points.
Why is a golfer with a metal club over her shoulder vulnerable to lightning in an open fairway? Would she be any safer under a tree?
Can the belt of a Van de Graaff accelerator be a conductor? Explain.
Are you relatively safe from lightning inside an automobile? Give two reasons.
Discuss pros and cons of a lightning rod being grounded versus simply being attached to a building.
Using the symmetry of the arrangement, show that the net Coulomb force on the charge at the center of the square below (Figure 1.44) is zero if the charges on the four corners are exactly equal.
(a) Using the symmetry of the arrangement, show that the electric field at the center of the square in Figure 1.44 is zero if the charges on the four corners are exactly equal. (b) Show that this is also true for any combination of charges in which and
(a) What is the direction of the total Coulomb force on in Figure 1.44 if is negative, and both are negative, and and both are positive? (b) What is the direction of the electric field at the center of the square in this situation?
Considering Figure 1.44, suppose that and First show that is in static equilibrium. You may neglect the gravitational force. Then discuss whether the equilibrium is stable or unstable, noting that this may depend on the signs of the charges and the direction of displacement of from the center of the square.
If in Figure 1.44, under what conditions will there be no net Coulomb force on ?
In regions of low humidity, one develops a special grip when opening car doors, or touching metal door knobs. This involves placing as much of the hand on the device as possible, not just the ends of one's fingers. Discuss the induced charge and explain why this is done.
Tollbooth stations on roadways and bridges usually have a piece of wire stuck in the pavement before them that will touch a car as it approaches. Why is this done?
Suppose a woman carries an excess charge. To maintain her charged status can she be standing on ground wearing just any pair of shoes? How would you discharge her? What are the consequences if she simply walks away?