Static electricity Flashcards

1
Q

What does static mean?

A

stationary

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2
Q

What is friction?

A

the force that opposes motion between two surfaces moving together

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3
Q

What is an electron?

A

a small negatively charged particle orbiting the nucleus of an atom

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4
Q

A charge can be . . .

A

positive or negative

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5
Q

What is a static charge?

A

a charge that can’t move

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6
Q

What is repulsion?

A

when two forces push against each other

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7
Q

What is attraction?

A

when two forces pull each other together

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8
Q

What is a conductor?

A

a material that will allow the flow of electricity through it

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9
Q

What is an insulator?

A

a material that will not allow the flow of electricity through it

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10
Q

How is a spark formed?

A

its formed as electrons jump from one material to another

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11
Q

What is potential difference?

A

The energy transferred per unit charge

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12
Q

What is an Earth wire?

A

a metal connected to an object that will safely conduct any build of static charge to the ground

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13
Q

What is an electric field?

A

the region around a charge where another charge will feel a force

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14
Q

What are the two rules for interaction of charges?

A
  • opposite charges attract

- same charges repel

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15
Q

What is static electricity?

A

a build up of static charge on the surface of an object

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16
Q

How is static electricity produced?

A

when two insulators are rubbed together, friction causes electrons to be stripped from one material onto the other

17
Q

What happens when a static electricity is produced? (2 things)

A

the material that lost electrons will become positively charged

the material that gained electrons will become negatively charged

18
Q

Can metals have a static charge?

A

if they are insulated from the ground a charge can be placed on a metal
(it will spread evenly over the surface)

19
Q

What are the four uses of static electricity?

A
  • paint spraying
  • insecticide spraying
  • photocopiers
  • electrostatic smoke precipitators
20
Q

How do paint sprayers work?

A
  • paint particles are given the same charge from a positively charged electron in the spray nozzle
  • particles all have the same charge so repel each other
  • this results in a fine mist
21
Q

Ho do photocopiers work?

A
  • photo-conducting drum is positively charges until light falls on it
  • light is reflected off of paper onto the drum
  • areas of black don’t reflect so these areas stay charged
  • black toner sticks to the charged areas (opposite charges attract)
  • paper is heated so that toner sticks to the paper permanently
22
Q

How do electrostatic smoke precipitators work?

A
  • smoke particles move through metal grid and are given a negative charge
  • smoke particles have a different charge to the metal plates inside the chimney
  • smoke particles are attracted to the metal plates, and separated from the clean waste gas
23
Q

How do insecticide sprayers work?

A
  • each droplet is given the same charge
  • the drops repel each other, so they spread evenly
  • droplets are attracted to the Earth (opposite charges attract)
  • means particles fall fast and are less likely to get blown away
24
Q

What do the field lines show about the force in an electric field?

A

field lines show the direction of the force

lines point away from a positive charge and towards a negative charge

25
Q

How does distance effect the strength of an electric field?

A

the further the distance, the weaker the electrical field

26
Q

How do field lines show the strength of the force?

A

the closer the field lines, the stronger the force

27
Q

Fill the gaps :

the field between two plates is _______ (the _____ at all points) as the lines are ________ and ______ spaced

A

the field between two plates is uniform (the same at all points) as the lines are parallel and evenly spaced

28
Q

Fill the gaps :

Interactions between fields of _________ _______ objects causes _ _____

A

interactions between fields of different charged objects causes a force

29
Q

What do field lines show?

A

Where the charged particles move along

30
Q

When is static electricity dangerous?

Fill the gaps :

_____ _____ and ________

  • when the wheels rub against the ground a ______ ______ is produced
  • this could result in a _____ jumping from the vehicle to the ______
  • to stop this causing an explosion when fuel is transferred, an _____ ____ is connected between the ______ and the ______ to safely _______ the charge to the ground
A

petrol tankers and aeroplanes

  • when the wheels rub against the ground a static charge is produced
  • this could result in a spark jumping from the vehicle to the ground
  • to stop this causing an explosion when fuel is transferred, an Earth line is connected between the vehicle and the ground to safely conduct the charge to the ground