In the circuit shown in Figure 18.91, all of the wire is made of Nichrome, but one segment has a much smaller cross-sectional area. On a copy of this diagram, using the same scale for magnitude that you used in the previous question for Figure 18.90, show the steady-state electric field at the locations indicated, including in the thinner segment. Before attempting to answer these questions, draw a copy of this diagram. All of the locations indicated by letters are inside the wire.

(a)On your diagram, show the electric field at the locations indicated, paying attention to relative magnitude. Use the same scale for magnitude as you did in the previous question.

(b)Carefully draw pluses and minuses on your diagram to show the approximate surface charge distribution that produces the electric field you drew. Make your drawing show clearly the differences between regions of high surface charge density and regions of low surface-charge density. Use your diagram to determine which of the following statements about this circuit are true.

(1) There is a large gradient of surface charge on the wire between locations Cand E. (2) The electron current is the same at every location in this circuit.

(3) Fewer electrons per second pass location Ethan location C.

(4) The magnitude of the electric field at location Gis smaller in this circuit than it

was in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

(5) The magnitude of the electric field is the same at every location in this circuit.

(6) The magnitude of the electric field at location D is larger than the magnitude of the electric field at location G.

(7) There is no surface charge at all on the wire near location G.

(8) The electron current in this circuit is less than the electron current in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) The direction of electric field in the circuit is as follows:

Step by step solution

01

Given data

A steady-state current flows through the Nichrome wire in the circuit, with one segment having a much smaller cross-sectional area

The following statements are provided:

(1) There is a large gradient of surface charge on the wire between locations Cand E.

(2) The electron current is the same at every location in this circuit.

(3) Fewer electrons per second pass location Ethan location C.

(4) The magnitude of the electric field at location Gis smaller in this circuit than it

was in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

(5) The magnitude of the electric field is the same at every location in this circuit.

(6) The magnitude of the electric field at location D is larger than the magnitude of the electric field at location G.

(7) There is no surface charge at all on the wire near location G.

(8) The electron current in this circuit is less than the electron current in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

02

Electric field direction

Electric field always points from the positive terminal to the negative terminal of a battery.

03

(a) Determination of electric field in the circuit

At steady state, the electric field is uniform for all identical locations of the wire in a circuit and is directed from the positive to the negative terminal. Since the current is kept uniform, the field is larger in the narrower section as current is directly proportional to both the cross sectional area and electric field. This is depicted in the following diagram:

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Why does the brightness of a bulb not change noticeably when you use longer copper wires to connect it to the battery? (1) Very little energy is dissipated in the thick connecting wires. (2) The electric field in connecting wires is very small, so emfEbulbLbulb. (3) Electric field in the connecting wires is zero, so emfEbulbLbulb. (4) Current in the connecting wires is smaller than current in the bulb. (5) All the current is used up in the bulb, so the connecting wires don’t matter.

A Nichrome wire 48 cm long and 0.25 mm in diameter is connected to a 1.6 V flashlight battery. What is the electric field inside the wire? Why you don’t have to know how the wire is bent? How would your answer change if the wire diameter change were 0.20 mm? (Not that the electric field in the wire is quiet small compared to the electric field near a charged tape.)

Question: Some students intended to run a light bulb off two batteries in series in the usual way, but they accidentally hooked up one of the batteries backwards, as shown in Figure 18.89 (the bulb is shown as a thin filament).

(a)Use+’s and -’s to show the approximate steady-state charge distribution along the wires and bulb.

(b)Draw vectors for the electric field at the indicated locations inside the connecting wires and bulb.

(c)Compare the brightness of the bulb in this circuit with the brightness the bulb would have had if one of the batteries hadn’t been put in backwards.

(d)Try the experiment to check your analysis. Does the bulb glow about as you predicted?

When a single thick-filament bulb of a particular kind and two batteries are connected in series, 3×1018 electrons pass through the bulb every second. When two batteries in series are connected to a single thin-filament bulb, with a filament made of the same material and length as the thick-filament bulb but a smaller cross-section, only 1.5×1018 electrons pass through the bulb every second. (a) In the circuit shown in Figure 18.109, how many electrons per second flow through the thin-filament bulb? (b) What approximations or simplifying assumptions did you make? (c) Show approximately the surface charge on a diagram of the circuit.

In the circuit shown figure 18.108, two thick copper wires connect a 1.5 V battery to a Nichrome wire. Each thick connecting wire is 17 cm long and has a radius of 9 mm. Copper has 8.4×1028mobile electrons per cubic meter and electron mobility. The Nichrome wire is 8 cm long and has a radius of 3 mm. Nichrome has 9×1028mobile electrons per cubic meter and electron mobility of 7×10-5(ms)(Vm).

(a) What is the magnitude of the electric field in the thick copper wire?

(b) What is the magnitude of the electric field in the thin Nichrome wire?

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