Electricity
The force between two electrically charged objects is
F=(Kq1q2)/r^2 (r=distance, q=charges, k=proportionality constant)
E = Elemental electric charge (-1.6 x 10-19 Coulombs)
Conductor: allows electric charge to move through it.
Insulator: materials in which the electrons are tightly bound.
E=F/q
F=Eq
A=F/M=Eq/M
W=FD=EqD
1 Volt=1 Joule/1 Coulomb
Ampere=Coulombs/Second (A=q/s)
1 Amp=6.25 x 1018 electrons/second
1 Amp(120V)=120W
P=VI
Electromotive Forces: Battery, Thermoelectric, Electromagnetism
Fluorescent lights - 1 amp
Motor starter - 100 amp
Head Llights - 2 or 3 ampResistance: Friction in a conductor, resists the movement of electrons, limits the amount of potential current that can pass.
R=V/A
V=AR
A=V/R
Where V=voltage A=current R=resistanceWhat determines resistance?Type of material, shape and size ; like a hose-bigger means less R, longer means more R
Electric current flows from high potential to low potential (volts)
Thus in a -12v DC battery the current travels from - to +
How are electricity and gravity the same?They both a forces, and follow the inverse-square law
How are they different?Electricity is a much stronger force
Gravity is exclusively attractive, while electricity is both repellant and attractive
Does current flow through or across a resistor? Through a resistor.
Is voltage established through or across a resistor? Across a resistor.
Ohms law:[/b] Amps=Volts/Resistance
(A=V/R)Other DefinitionsElectrostatics: The study of electric charges at rest relative to one another
Capacitor: An electrical device, in its simplest form a pair of parallel conducting plates separated by a small distance, that stores electric charge.
Coulomb’s Law: the relationship among electrical force, charge, and distance.
Coulomb: the SI unit of electrical charge.
Conductor: any material through which charge easily flows when subject to an external force.
Insulator: any material that resists charge flow through it when subject to an external force.
Semiconductor: a poorly conducting material, such as crystalline silicon or germanium, which can be made a better-conducting material by the addition of certain impurities or energy.
Charging by contact: the transfer of charge from one substance to another by physical contact between substances.
Charging by induction: the change in charge of a grounded object, caused by the electrical influence of electric charge close by but not in contact.
Electrically polarized: term applied to an atom or molecule in which the charges are aligned so that one side is slightly more positive or negative than the opposite side.
Electric field: the energetic region of space surrounding a charged object. About a charged point, the field decreases with distance according to the inverse- square law.
Electric potential energy: the energy a charge possesses by virtue of its location in an electric field.
Electric potential: the electric potential energy per amount of charge, measured in volts, and often called voltage.
Potential difference: the difference in voltage between two points, measured in volts.
Electric current: the flow of electric charge that transports energy from one place to another. Measured in amperes, where 1A is the flow of 6.25 x 1018 electrons per second.
Electrical Resistance: the property of a material that resists the flow of an electric current through it. (ohms).
Superconductor: a material in which the electrical resistance to the flow of electric current drops to near zero or zero under special circumstances that usually include low temperatures.
Direct Current: an electric current flowing in one direction only.
Alternating Current: electric current that repeatedly reverses its direction; the electric charges vibrate about relatively fixed points. In the U.S. the vibration rate is 60Hz.
Electric Power: the rate of energy transfer, or the rate of doing work; the amount of energy per unit time, which electrically can be measured by the product of current and voltage. Measured in watts or kilowatts.
Series circuit: an electric circuit with devices having resistances arranged in such a way that the same electric current flows through all of them.
Parallel circuit: an electric circuit with two or more resistances arranged in branches in such a way that any single one completes the circuit independently of all the others.
Notes:Electrons can be forced into vibration by the vibration electric fields of electromagnetic waves