What You Already Know ÎCoulomb’s ÎElectric ÎGauss’ law fields law ÎElectric fields for several configurations Point Line Plane (nonconducting) Sheet (conducting) Ring (along axis) Disk (along axis) Sphere Cylinder Dipole (along || and ⊥ axes) PHY2049: Chapter 24 1 Chapter 24: Electric Potential ÎElectric Potential Energy ÎElectric Potential ÎEquipotential Surfaces ÎPotential of Point Charge ÎPotential of Charge Distribution ÎCalculating the Field from the Potential ÎPotential Energy from a System of Charges ÎPotential of Isolated Charged Conductors PHY2049: Chapter 24 2 Reading Quiz: Chapter 24 ÎAn equipotential surface is: a) b) c) d) e) a surface where the electric field is constant always parallel to the electric field a surface where the potential is zero always perpendicular to the electric field a surface where the electric field is zero PHY2049: Chapter 24 3 Reading Quiz: Chapter 24 ÎThe volt is a unit of: a) potential energy b) electric field c) potential d) force PHY2049: Chapter 24 4 Reading Quiz: Chapter 24 ÎElectric potential is: a) a scalar quantity b) a vector quantity c) can be either scalar or vector PHY2049: Chapter 24 5 Electric Work and Potential Energy ÎFrom Physics 1 Find work moving object from x A to WAB = F ⋅ ( x B − x A ) ÎF x B using constant force F A 1 B 2 is an example of a “conservative” force 3 Work depends only on endpoints, not on path (e.g., 1, 2 or 3) Allows us to define “potential energy” U B − U A ≡ −WAB = −F ⋅ ( x B − x A ) ÎMore generally U B − U A ≡ −∫ xB xA F ⋅ dx PHY2049: Chapter 24 6 Electric Work and Potential Energy ÎPoint charges Q, q: Work moving charge q from A → B B B kQq A A WAB = ∫ F ⋅ ds = ∫ WAB = ∫ B kQq A ÎCoulomb r2 r2 rˆ ⋅ ds ( rˆ ⋅ ds = dr ) rB −kQq ⎤ kQq kQq dr = = − ⎥ r ⎦ rA rA rB force is conservative (path independent) Potential energy of two point charges U B − U A = −WAB kQq kQq kQq = − ⇒ U (r ) = rB rA r PHY2049: Chapter 24 7 Electric Force is Conservative ÎHolds in all electrostatic situations (not just point charge) Proof: ÎWork integrate over any charge distribution done by electric field moving charge q from i to f Calculate from difference of potential energies i Charges Work: q f Welec = −ΔU fi = U i − U f PHY2049: Chapter 24 8 Problem: Electric Potential Energy ÎTwo identical +12 mC point charges are initially spaced 5 cm from each other. If they are released at the same instant from rest, how fast will they be moving when they are very far from each other? Assume m1 = m2 = 1.0 g. Ki + Ui = K f + U f kq 2 =2 0+ di ( 1 mv 2 f 2 (9 ×10 ) (0.012 ) −3 10 ( ) ( 0.05) 9 vf = ) kq 2 +0 ⇒ vf = md i 2 = 1.6 × 105 m/s PHY2049: Chapter 24 9 Gravitational & Electric Potential Energy Gravity Electric A h B WG = mgh = U A − U B - + + + + + + + A d B WE = qEd = U A − U B Point B at lower potential energy than point A (q>0) PHY2049: Chapter 24 10 Electric Potential Î Potential = PE per unit charge Δ V = ΔU / q Î Potential ------------------- b difference: constant E Vb − Va = −E ⋅ ( xb − x a ) = − Ed Î Potential difference: general E field d E +Q b Vb − Va = − ∫ E ⋅ ds a Î Potential +q: Moves from higher to lower V −q: Moves from lower to higher V PHY2049: Chapter 24 a +++++++++++ higher at + charges and “falls” to lower value at − charges 11 Units for V and E ÎUnits V of potential: “volt” = U/q ⎯→ Volt = Joule / Coulomb ÎUnits of electric field = Eq ⎯→ E = F/q → Newton / Coulomb V = Ed ⎯→ E = V/d → Volt / Meter F PHY2049: Chapter 24 12 Example of Potential of Point Charge ÎPoint charge q (using V = 0 at r = ∞) kq V= r ÎExample: ( Potential at surface of proton (r = 10-15 m) )( 9 × 10 1.6 × 10 kq V= = −15 r 10 9 −19 ) = 1.44 ×106 = 1.44 MV PHY2049: Chapter 24 13 Energy Units: Electron Volts Î1 eV = energy of charge e accelerated through 1 Volt ( ) 1eV = 1.6 × 10−19 C i1V = 1.6 × 10−19 J Î Let q = 4e and V = 2000 V K = 4 × 2000 = 8000eV = 8keV ( ) K = 8000 × 1.6 × 10−19 = 1.28 × 10−15 J PHY2049: Chapter 24 14 ConcepTest: Electric Energy ÎA proton and an electron are each accelerated across a region of constant E field. Which has larger acceleration? (a) proton (b) electron (c) both have equal acceleration (d) neither one accelerates F = Ee a = F/m = Ee/m me mp Electron is much lighter than proton PHY2049: Chapter 24 15 ConcepTest: Electric Energy ÎWhich has the biggest increase in KE? (a) proton (b) electron (c) both have the same increase in KE (d) KE = 0 for both K = Fd = Eed Ve > Vp PHY2049: Chapter 24 16 Equipotential Surfaces ÎEquipotentials: No ÎE Contours of constant potential work to move charge along contour: W = -qΔV = 0 ⊥ equipotential surface E⎥⎥ ≠ 0, would need work to move charge along surface See http://www.falstad.com/emstatic/ If PHY2049: Chapter 24 17 Equipotential: Constant E Field Constant E Example: Capacitor PHY2049: Chapter 24 18 Equipotential: Point Charge Equipotentials PHY2049: Chapter 24 19 Equipotential: Dipole PHY2049: Chapter 24 20 Topographic Map: Equal Altitude Contours Contour: Line of constant gravitational potential PHY2049: Chapter 24 21