Chapter 22: Q.1 (page 623)
Can an insulator be charged? If so, how would you charge an insulator? If not, why not?
Short Answer
Reason: By frictional contact between an non-grounded or grounded conductor and an insulator, the charging happens.
Chapter 22: Q.1 (page 623)
Can an insulator be charged? If so, how would you charge an insulator? If not, why not?
Reason: By frictional contact between an non-grounded or grounded conductor and an insulator, the charging happens.
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Get started for freeTwo small plastic spheres each have a mass of 2.0 g and a charge of -50.0 nC. They are placed 2.0 cm apart (center to center).
a. What is the magnitude of the electric force on each sphere?
b. By what factor is the electric force on a sphere larger than its weight?
Two positive point charges q and 4q are at x = 0 and x = L, respectively, and free to move. A third charge is placed so that the entire three-charge system is in static equilibrium. What are the magnitude, sign, and x-coordinate of the third charge?
A massless spring is attached to a support at one end and has a 2.0 mC charge glued to the other end. A -4.0 mC charge is slowly brought near. The spring has stretched 1.2 cm when the charges are 2.6 cm apart. What is the spring constant of the spring?
In a simple model of the hydrogen atom, the electron moves in a circular orbit of radius 0.053 nm around a stationary proton. How many revolutions per second does the electron make?
A glass rod that has been charged to +12 nC touches a metal sphere. Afterward, the rod’s charge is +8.0 nC.
a. What kind of charged particle was transferred between the rod and the sphere, and in which direction? That is, did it move from the rod to the sphere or from the sphere to the rod?
b. How many charged particles were transferred?
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