College Physics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134601823
Author: ETKINA, Eugenia, Planinšič, G. (gorazd), Van Heuvelen, Alan
Publisher: Pearson,
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Chapter 18, Problem 4RQ
Review Question 18.4 Imagine that you have an electric field in some large region of space. The electric potential at location P is 10 V and at another faraway location N is 3 V. Your friend says that the
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Chapter 18 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.1 How do you estimate the...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.2 You have a point-like object...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.3 Compare the work needed to...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.4 Imagine that you have an...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.5 In this section you read that...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.6 What are the differences...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.7 A parallel plate capacitor...Ch. 18 - Review Question 18.8 Why do heart contractions...Ch. 18 - 1 What does the field at point A, which is a...Ch. 18 - Why can you shield an object from an external...
Ch. 18 - If you place a block made of a conducting material...Ch. 18 - 4. If you place a block made of a dielectric...Ch. 18 - 5. Two identical positive charges are located at a...Ch. 18 - An electric dipole is placed between the...Ch. 18 - 7. A positive charge is fixed at some distance d...Ch. 18 - Figure Q18.8 shows E field lines in a region of...Ch. 18 - How do we use the model of the electric field to...Ch. 18 - Describe a procedure to determine the E field at...Ch. 18 - What does it mean if the E field at a certain...Ch. 18 - A very small positive charge is placed at one...Ch. 18 - 13. How do we create an E field with parallel...Ch. 18 - 14. Draw a sketch of the field lines caused by...Ch. 18 - 15. Draw a sketch of the field lines caused by...Ch. 18 - 16. Jim thinks that E field lines are the paths...Ch. 18 - Can E field lines cross? Explain why or why not.Ch. 18 - An electron moving horizontally from left to right...Ch. 18 - 19. (a) What does it mean if the electric...Ch. 18 - 20. Explain how grounding works.
Ch. 18 - 21. Explain how shielding works.
Ch. 18 - 22. Explain the difference between the microscopic...Ch. 18 - Explain why, for charged objects submerged in a...Ch. 18 - 24. What does it mean if the dielectric constant k...Ch. 18 - What is the dielectric constant of a metal?Ch. 18 - Describe the relation between the quantities E...Ch. 18 - If the V field in a region is constant, what is...Ch. 18 - 28. Why are uncharged pieces of a dielectric...Ch. 18 - 29. Draw equipotential surfaces and label them in...Ch. 18 - Show a charge arrangement and a point in space...Ch. 18 - 31. Explain what happens when you place a...Ch. 18 - (a) Explain what happens when you place a...Ch. 18 - 33. Explain why the excess charge on an electrical...Ch. 18 - Draw a microscopic representation of the charge...Ch. 18 - 1. * (a) Construct a graph of the magnitude of the...Ch. 18 - * A uranium nucleus has 92 protons. (a) Determine...Ch. 18 - 3. The electron and the proton in a hydrogen atom...Ch. 18 - * Use the superposition principle to draw E field...Ch. 18 - 5. * Use the superposition principle to draw ...Ch. 18 - * E field lines for a field created by an...Ch. 18 - 7. * Two objects with charges C are 50 cm from...Ch. 18 - 8. * charged object is 6.0 cm along a horizontal...Ch. 18 - 9. ** charged object is 4.0 cm along a horizontal...Ch. 18 - 10. **A distance d separates two objects, each...Ch. 18 - 11. * A point-like charged object with a charge +...Ch. 18 - 12. * A 3.0-g aluminum foil ball with a charge of ...Ch. 18 - 13. ** (a) If the string in the previous problem...Ch. 18 - * EST Using Earths E field for flight Earth has an...Ch. 18 - * An electron moving with a speed v0 enters a...Ch. 18 - 10-9 C hangs freely from a 1.0-m-long thread. What...Ch. 18 - 17. A 0.50-g oil droplet with charge is in a...Ch. 18 - 19. * Equation Jeopardy 1 The equations below...Ch. 18 - * Equation Jeopardy 2 The equations below describe...Ch. 18 - 21. During a lightning flash. of charge moves...Ch. 18 - 22. * (a) Construct a graph of the V field created...Ch. 18 - * A horizontal distance d separates two objects...Ch. 18 - * Two objects with charges qand+q are separated by...Ch. 18 - * Four objects with the same charge q are placed...Ch. 18 - 26. Spark jumps to nose An electric spark jumps...Ch. 18 - 27. * Two charged point-like objects are...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric field in body cell The electric...Ch. 18 - * Equation Jeopardy 3 The equation below describes...Ch. 18 - 31. * Equation Jeopardy 4 The equation below...Ch. 18 - 32. * While a sphere with positive charge remains...Ch. 18 - 33. * Figure P18.33 shows field lines in a region...Ch. 18 - 34. * A metal sphere has no charge on it. A...Ch. 18 - 35. ** EST A Van de Graaff generator of radius...Ch. 18 - ** A metal ball of radius R1 has a charge Q. Later...Ch. 18 - 37. * Positively charged metal sphere A is placed...Ch. 18 - *Two small metal spheres A and B have different...Ch. 18 - 39. * An electric dipole such as a water molecule...Ch. 18 - 10-7C at its head and an equal magnitude negative...Ch. 18 - 41. BIO Body cell membrane electric field (a)...Ch. 18 - 42. ** Earth's electric field Earth has an...Ch. 18 - 43. You have a parallel plate capacitor. (a)...Ch. 18 - 44. * A capacitor of capacitance C with a vacuum...Ch. 18 - 45. * A capacitor of capacitance C with a vacuum...Ch. 18 - How does the capacitance of a parallel plate...Ch. 18 - BIO EST Axon capacitance The long thin cylindrical...Ch. 18 - 48. ** Sphere capacitance A metal sphere of radius...Ch. 18 - * BIO EST Capacitance of red blood cell Assume...Ch. 18 - BIO Defibrillator During ventricular fibrillation...Ch. 18 - * EST The dielectric strength of air is 3106V/m....Ch. 18 - * Charged cloud causes electric field on Earth The...Ch. 18 - *BIO Hearts dipole charge The heart has a dipole...Ch. 18 - 55. * In a hot water heater, water warms when...Ch. 18 - 56. ** EST Lightning warms water A lightning flash...Ch. 18 - 57 * Four charged particles A, B, C, and D are...Ch. 18 - 59. ** A small object of unknown mass and charge...Ch. 18 - 61. * BIO Electrophoresis Electrophoresis is used...Ch. 18 - 62. * BIO Energy stored in axon electric field An...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - BIO Electric discharge by eels In several aquatic...Ch. 18 - Electrostatic precipitator (esp) Electrostatic...Ch. 18 - Electrostatic precipitator (esp) Electrostatic...Ch. 18 - Electrostatic precipitator (esp) Electrostatic...Ch. 18 - Electrostatic precipitator (esp) Electrostatic...Ch. 18 - Electrostatic precipitator (esp) Electrostatic...
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- (a) Use the exact result from Example 24.4 to find the electric potential created by the dipole described in the example at the point (3a, 0). (b) Explain how this answer compares with the result of the approximate expression that is valid when x is much greater than a.arrow_forward(a) Plot the potential of a uniformly charged 1-m rod with 1 C/m charge as a function of the perpendicular distance from the center. Draw your graph from s = 0,1 in to s = 1.0m. (b) On the same graph, plot the potential of a point charge with a 1-C charge at the origin, (c) Which potential is stronger near the rod? (d) What happens to the difference as the distance increases? Interpret your result.arrow_forwardA long thin wire is used in laser printers to charge the photoreceptor before exposure to light. This is done by applying a large potential difference between the wire and the photoreceptor. a. Use Equation 26.23, V(r)=20lnRr to determine a relationship between the electric potential V and the magnitude of the electric field E at a distance r from the center of the wire of radius R (r R). b. Determine the electric potential at a distance of 2.0 mm from the surface of a wire of radius R = 0.80 mm that will produce an electric field of 1.8 106 V/m at that point.arrow_forward
- Unreasonable Results (a) A certain parallel plate capacitor has plates of area 4.00 m2 separated by 0.0100 mm of nylon, and stores 0.170 C of charge. What is the applied voltage? (b) What is unreasonable about this result? (c) Which assumptions are responsible or inconsistent?arrow_forward(a) What is the capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor with plates of area 1.50 m that are separated by 0.0200 mm of neoprene rubber? (b) What charge does it hold when 9.00 V is applied to it?arrow_forwardReview. In fair weather, the electric field in the air at a particular location immediately above the Earth's surface is 120 N/C directed downward, (a) What is the surface charge density on the ground? Is it positive or negative? (b) Imagine the surface charge density is uniform over the planet. What then is the charge of the whole surface of the Earth? (c) What is the Earths electric potential due to this charge? (d) What is the difference in potential between the head and the feet of a person 1.75 m tall? (Ignore any charges in the atmosphere.) (e) Imagine the Moon, with 27.3% of the radius of the Earth, had a charge 27.3% as large, with the same sign. Find the electric force the Earth would then exert on the Moon, (f) State how the answer to part (e) compares with the gravitational force the Earth exerts on the Moon.arrow_forward
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Physics Capacitor & Capacitance part 7 (Parallel Plate capacitor) CBSE class 12; Author: LearnoHub - Class 11, 12;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JoW6UstbZ7Y;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY