Forces
Charging Methods
Conductors and Insulators
Electric Fields
Misc.
100

What is a field force?

A field force is any force that can be exerted by an object on another without the two objects having to touch

100

Describe the process of charging by contact

Rubbing two unlike materials together tends to charge both of them, as electrons flow from one object into another

100

Materials through which electrons do not freely flow are called...

Insulators

100

What is a test charge?

A small, positive charge

100

A repellant force occurs between two charges when they are...

The same sign

200

Name two field forces

Electric force and gravitational force

200

Object A and Object B are rubbed together to create a negative charge on Object A and a positive charge on Object B. What can you say about the magnitude of the charge on Object A?

It will be equal to the magnitude of the charge on Object B.

200

Materials through which electrons flow freely are called...

Conductors

200

Is an electric field stronger 20 cm away from the source charge or 30 cm away from the source charge?

20 cm

200

What does it mean that electric charge is conserved?

Any charge gained by one object will be lost from another object- charge is not created or destroyed.

300

Which is stronger: gravitational force or electric force?

Electric force

300

When a rubber balloon (insulator) is charged by rubbing it on hair, does the whole balloon get charged or just the area that touches the hair? Why?

Just the area that touches the hair, because electrons do not flow freely in an insulator.

300

This method of charging can be done to both insulators and conductors

Charging by contact

300

In a field diagram, should electric field lines point towards or away from a positively charged object?

Away from

300

What two factors determine the strength of an electric field?

1. The magnitude of the charge creating the field

2. The distance from the charge

400

What are two differences between electric force and gravitational force?

1. Electric force is stronger

2. Electric force can be either attractive or repulsive, while gravitational force can only be attractive

400

Describe the process of polarization

A charged object placed near an insulator causes the molecules on the insulator's surface to gain a partial charge on each side, creating a slight surface charge on the insulator

400

When a conductor is in electrostatic equilibrium, what is one place where charge accumulates?

1. The surface of the conductor (always)

2. Pointed areas (more charge accumulates than in rounded areas)

400

In a field diagram, should electric field lines point towards or away from a negatively charged object?

Towards

400

What has occurred when the molecules on the surface of an object have a partial charge on each side?

Polarization

500

When two charges are moved closer together, how does the force acting between them change?

It becomes stronger

500

Describe the process of induction

1. A charged object is placed near a conductor

2. Conductor is grounded

3. Charge flows out through ground

4. Ground is removed

5. Charged object can now be removed

500

When a conductor is in electrostatic equilibrium, what must be true of the electric field directly outside the conductor?

The electric field outside the conductor must be perpendicular to the surface of the conductor

500

Charge A is twice as strong as charge B. In a field diagram, charge A will have ___________ as many field lines going in/out of it as B.

Twice

500

How do you calculate the resultant force when multiple charges are exerting force on a charge?

The vector sum of each force vector is the resultant force.

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