Electrostatics
General Resources
📖 Reference Textbook:
University Physics Volume 2: Chapter 5 – Electrostatics
Theory
⚡ Charge, Conductors, and Insulators
Electric Charge (q)
- Basic property: Objects can have a positive or negative charge.
- Types: Positive (more protons than electrons), Negative (more electrons than protons).
- Conservation: Charge is neither created nor destroyed, only transferred.
- Quantized: , with .
Conductors
- Charges move freely.
- Examples: copper, silver, salt solutions.
Insulators
- Charges can’t move freely.
- Examples: glass, rubber, plastic.
⚖️ Coulomb’s Law (Scalar Form)
The magnitude of the electrostatic force between two point charges (source charge) and (test charge), separated by a distance , is: , with .
➡️ Coulomb’s Law (Vector Form)
Where:
- = force on test charge
- = charges
- = distance
- = unit vector from source to test charge
📝 Example Calculations
✋ Triboelectric Effect
When two materials rub and separate, electrons transfer → one becomes negative, the other positive.
- Higher in series (glass, hair) → lose electrons → positive
- Lower (rubber, Teflon) → gain electrons → negative
Daily life examples: balloon on hair; static cling in clothes.
Demonstrations
💧 Bending Water
🎈 Balloon on a Wall