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16: Electric Charges and Fields

  • Page ID
    19478
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    Learning Objectives
    • Understand the definition of an electric charge.
    • Understand the difference between an insulator and a conductor.
    • Understand different mechanisms for charging objects.
    • Understand Coulomb’s model for the electric force.
    • Understand the definition of an electric field.
    • Understand how to calculate the electric field from a continuous distribution of charge.
    • Understand how to model an electric dipole.

    In this and subsequent chapters, we start to look at the theories that describe electric and magnetic phenomena. Within the framework for dynamics that was developed by Newton, we will introduce the theories of electromagnetism which describe the electric force, the magnetic force, and how these two interact. This first chapter introduces the description of the electric force, analogously to how we introduced Newton’s Universal Theory of Gravity to describe the gravitational force.

    prelude

    If you rub a balloon against a carpet and bring it near your head, your hair will stand up and try to touch the balloon.

    1. The electric charge of the balloon is opposite of that on your hair.
    2. Your hair has no net electric charge, this is an example of charge separation and induction.

    Thumbnail: The eight source charges each apply a force on the single test charge Q. Each force can be calculated independently of the other seven forces. This is the essence of the superposition principle. (CC BY 4.0; OpenStax).​​


    This page titled 16: Electric Charges and Fields is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Ryan D. Martin, Emma Neary, Joshua Rinaldo, and Olivia Woodman via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.