13 Learning Materials

Textbook Material to Read

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Chapter 18

18.1 Static Electricity and Charge: Conservation of Charge

18.2 Conductors and Insulators

18.3 Coulomb’s Law

18.4Electric Field: Concept of a Field Revisited

18.6 Electric Forces in Biology

Chapter 19

19.1 Electric Potential Energy: Potential Difference

19.2 Electric Potential in a Uniform Electric Field

19.3 Electrical Potential Due to a Point Charge

Main Concepts

Basic Charge

The magnitude of a basic charge is 1.60 x 10-19 C (coulomb).

The Law of Conservation of Charges

The law of conservation of charge ensures that whenever a charge is created, an equal charge of the opposite sign is created at the same time.

Coulomb’s Law

This law calculates the magnitude of the electrostatic force [latex]F[/latex] between two point charges [latex]q_{1}[/latex] and [latex]q_{2}[/latex], separated by a distance [latex]r[/latex].

[latex]F=k\frac{|q_{1}q_{2}|}{r^2}[/latex]

The constant [latex]k[/latex] is 8.988 x 109 N m2/ C2.

  • The electrostatic force between two subatomic particles is far greater than the gravitational force between the same two particles.

Electric Potential

  • Electric potential is potential energy per unit charge.

The electric potential [latex]V[/latex] of a point charge [latex]Q[/latex] is given by

[latex]V=\frac{kQ}{r}[/latex].

The constant [latex]k[/latex] is 8.988 x 109 N m2/ C2.

[latex]r[/latex] is distance from the point charge.

Electric potential is a scalar, and electric field is a vector.

Electric Field

Electric field [latex]\textbf{F}[/latex] for a point charge [latex]Q[/latex] is given by

[latex]E=\frac{kQ}{r^2}[/latex]

The constant [latex]k[/latex] is 8.988 x 109 N m2/ C2.

[latex]r[/latex] is distance from the point charge.

  • The electrostatic force field surrounding a charged object extends out into space in all directions.

Conductors and insulators

and allows charge to move relatively freely through it is called a conductor.

  • Other substances, such as glass, do not allow charges to move through them. These are called insulators.

Additional Resources

OpenStax High School Physics, chapter 18 Static Electricity

YouTube: video on the electric field around a charge

definition

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Physics for Health II: Study Guide Copyright © 2022 by Elena Chudaeva is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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