A capacitor consists of two large metal disks of radius 1.1 m placed parallel to each other, a distance of 1.2 mm apart. The capacitor is charged up to have an increasing amount of charge +Q on one disk and −Q on the other. At about what value of Q does a spark appear between the disks?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The value of Q at which spark appear between disks is1.009×10-4C .

Step by step solution

01

Identification of given data

The given data can be listed below,

  • The radius of metal disk is,R=1.1 m
  • The distance between two disk is,d=1.2mm
  • The maximum electric field of air is, E=3×108N/C
02

Concept/Significance of charging of capacitors

A parallel plate capacitor is made up of two big planar parallel conducting plates separated by a tiny distance, each of which is linked to wires that are separated from one another by a thin area that can be a vacuum or a dielectric substance but not a conductor.

03

Determination of value of Q does a spark appear between the disks

The electric field of capacitor is given by,

E=Q2ε0

Here, q is the charge on the disk, A is the area of disk andε0 is the permittivity of free space.

Substitute all the values in the above equation, the charge on the disk is given by,

Q=EAε0=3×106N/Cπ1.1m28.85×10-12C2/N.m2=1.009×10-4C

Thus, the value of Q at which spark appear between disks is 1.009×10-4C.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Suppose that the radius of a disk is 21 cm, and the total charge distributed uniformly all over the disk is 5×10-6C. (a) Use the exact result to calculate the electric field 1 mm from the center of the disk. (b) Use the exact result to calculate the electric field 3 mm from the center of the disk. (c) Does the field decrease significantly?

A thin rod lies on the x axis with one end atand the other end at-A, as shown in Figure 15.51. A charge of-Q
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Answer using the variables x,y,dx,A,Qas appropriate. Remember that the rod has charge-Q. (a) In terms of the symbolic quantities given above and on the diagram, what is the charge per unit length of the rod? (b) What is the amount of chargedQon the small piece of lengthdx? (c) What is the vector from this source to the observation location? (d) What is the distance from this source to the observation location? (e) When we set up an integral to find the electric field at the observation location due to the entire rod, what will be the integration variable?

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A large, thin plastic disk with radiusR = 1.5 m carries a uniformly distributed charge of −Q = −3 × 10−5 C as shown in Figure 15.59. A circular piece of aluminum foil is placed d = 3 mm from the disk, parallel to the disk. The foil has a radius of r = 2 cm and a thickness t = 1 mm.


(a) Show the charge distribution on the close-up of the foil. (b) Calculate the magnitude and direction of the electric field at location × at the center of the foil, inside the foil. (c) Calculate the magnitude q of the charge on the left circular face of the foil.

Explain qualitatively how it is possible for the electric field at locations near the center of a uniformly charged disk not to vary with distance away from the disk.

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