Physics Ip
Physics Ip
TO ESTIMATE THE
CHARGE INDUCED ON
EACH OF THE TWO
IDENTICAL STRYO FOAM
(OR PITH) BALLS
SUSPENDED IN A
VERTICAL PLANE BY
MAKING USE OF
COULOMB’S LAW
Coulomb
Coulomb graduated in
November 1761
from École royale du génie
de Mézières. Over the next
twenty years he was
posted to a variety of
locations where he was
involved in engineering -
structural, fortifications,
soil mechanics, as well as
other fields of engineering.
His first posting was to
Brest but in February 1764
he was sent to Martinique,
in the West Indies, where
he was put in charge of building the new Fort Bourbon and this
task occupied him until June 1772.
On his return to France, Coulomb was sent to Bouchain.
However, he now began to write important works on applied
mechanics and he presented his first work to the Académie des
Sciences in Paris in 1773. In 1779 Coulomb was sent to
Rochefort to collaborate with the Marquis de Montalembert in
constructing a fort made entirely from wood near Ile d'Aix. During
his period at Rochefort, Coulomb carried on his research into
mechanics, in particular using the shipyards in Rochefort as
laboratories for his experiments.
Upon his return to France, with the rank of Captain, he was
employed at La Rochelle, the Isle of Aix and Cherbourg. He
discovered an inverse relationship of the force betweenelectric
charges and the square of its distance, later named after him
as Coulomb's law.
COULOMB’S LAW
In 1785 Augustine de Coulomb investigated the attractive and
repulsive forces between charged objects, experimentally
formulating what is now referred to as Coulomb’s Law: “The
magnitude of the electric force that a particle exerts on another is
directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely
proportional to the square of the distance between them.”
Mathematically, this electrostatic F acting on two charged
particles (q1, q2) is expressed as
where r is the separation distance between the objects and k is a
constant of proportionality, called the Coulomb constant, k = 9.0 ×
109 N · m2/C2. This formula gives us the magnitude of the force
as well as direction by noting a positive force as attractive and a
negative force as repulsive. Noting that like charges repel each
other and opposite charges attracting each other, Coulomb
measured the force between the objects, small metal coated
balls, by using a torsion balance similar to the balance used to
measure gravitational forces.
OBJECTIVE:-
To estimate the charge induced on each of the two identical styro
foam (or pith) balls suspended in a vertical plane by making use
of coulomb’s law.
MATERIALS REQUIRED:-
Small size identical balls (pitch or soft plastic)
Physical balance or electronic balance
Halfmeter Scale
Cotton thread
Stand
Glass rod (or plastic rod)
Silk cloth (or wollen cloth)
THEORY:-
The fundamental concept in electrostatics is electrical charge. We
are all familiar with the fact that rubbing two materials together —
for example, a rubber comb on cat fur — produces a “static”
charge. This process is called charging by friction. Surprisingly,
the exact physics of the process of charging by friction is poorly
understood. However, it is known that the making and breaking of
contact between the two materials transfers the charge.
x kq 2
=mg 2l = x 2
3
mgx
g= 2lk
PROCEDURE:-
PRECAUTIONS:-
1. The suspended balls should not be touched by any
conducting body.
2. Rub the glass rod properly with the silk cloth to produce
more charge.
3. Weight the mass of the balls accurately.
SOURCE OF ERROR:-
1. The balls may not be of equal size and mass.
2. The distance between the balls may be measured
accurately.