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1 | P a g e 
Charge 
In physics, a charge may refer to one of many different quantities, such as the electric 
charge in electromagnetism or the color charge in quantum chromodynamics. Charges are associated 
with conserved quantum numbers. 
Electric charge 
Electric charge is the physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when close to other 
electrically charged matter. There are two types of electric charges, called positive and negative. 
Positively charged substances are repelled from other positively charged substances, but attracted to 
negatively charged substances; negatively charged substances are repelled from negative and attracted 
to positive. An object will be negatively charged if it has an excess of electrons, and will otherwise be 
positively charged or uncharged. The SI unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C), although in electrical 
engineering it is also common to use the ampere-hour (Ah), and in chemistry it is common to use the 
elementary charge (e) as a unit. The symbol Q is often used to denote a charge. 
The electric charge is a fundamental conserved property of some subatomic particles, which determines 
their electromagnetic interaction. Electrically charged matter is influenced by, and produces, 
electromagnetic fields. The interaction between a moving charge and an electromagnetic field is the 
source of the electromagnetic force, which is one of the four fundamental forces. 
Twentieth-century experiments demonstrated that electric charge is quantized; that is, it comes in integer 
multiples of individual small units called the elementary charge, e, approximately equal to 1.602×10−19 
coulombs (except for particles called quarks, which have charges that are integer multiples of e/3). The 
proton has a charge of e, and the electron has a charge of −e. 
Overview 
Charge is the fundamental property of forms of matter that exhibit electrostatic attraction or repulsion in 
the presence of other matter. Electric charge is a characteristic property of many subatomic particles. The 
charges of free-standing particles are integer multiples of the elementary charge e; we say that electric 
charge is quantized. Michael Faraday, in his electrolysis experiments, was the first to note the discrete 
nature of electric charge. Robert Millikan's oil-drop experiment demonstrated this fact directly, and 
measured the elementary charge. 
During the formation of macroscopic objects, usually the const ituent atoms and ions will combine in such 
a manner that they form structures composed of neutral ionic compounds electrically bound to neutral 
atoms. Thus macroscopic objects tend toward being neutral overall, but macroscopic objects are rarely 
perfectly net neutral. 
There are times when macroscopic objects contain ions distributed throughout the material, rigidly bound 
in place, giving an overall net positive or negative charge to the object. Also, macroscopic objects made 
of conductive elements, can more or less easily (depending on the element) take on or give off electrons, 
and then maintain a net negative or positive charge indefinitely. When the net electric charge of an object
is non-zero and motionless, the phenomenon is known as static electricity. Charge can easily be 
produced by rubbing two dissimilar materials together, such as rubbing amber with fur or glass with silk. 
In this way non-conductive materials can be charged to a significant degree, either positively or 
negatively. 
Finding The Charge on e- using MODE i.e. 
________Millikan Oil Drop Experiment 
•The Oil-Drop Experiment involved ionizing droplets of oil as they fell through the air, and balancing the 
force of gravity with the force of an electric applied by electrodes above and below the droplet. 
•Millikan could not directly count the number of electrons on each oil droplet, but found that the common 
denominator between all measured charges was equal to 1.5924 ×10−19 C, and thus concluded that this 
value was the charge of an electron. 
•The measured value of an electron's charge, 1.5924 ×10−19 C, differs from the accepted value of 
1.602176487 ×10−19 C by less than one percent. 
Voltage: 
The amount of electrostatic potential between two points in space. 
Electric field: 
A region of space around a charged particle, or between two voltages; it exerts a force on charged 
objects in its vicinity. 
Terminal velocity: 
The speed at which an object in free-fall and not in a vacuum ceases to accelerate downwards because 
the force of gravity is equal and opposite of the drag force acting against it. 
The Oil-Drop Experiment: 
The Oil-Drop Experiment, otherwise known as the Millikan Oil-Drop Experiment, is one of the most 
influential studies in the history of physical science. 
Performed by Robert Millikan and Harvey Fletcher in 1911, the experiment was designed to determine 
the charge of a single electron, otherwise known as the elementary electric charge. Millikan designed his 
experiment to measure the force on oil droplets between two electrodes. 
He used an atomizer to spray a mist of tiny oil droplets into a chamber, which included a hole. Some 
droplets would fall through this hole and into a chamber, where he measured their terminal velocity and 
calculated their mass. Millikan then exposed the droplets to X-rays, which ionized molecules in the air and 
caused electrons to attach to the oil droplets, thus making them charged. The top and bottom of the 
chamber were attached to a battery, and the potential difference between the top and bottom produc ed 
an electric field that acted on the charged oil drops. 
2 | P a g e
Adjusting the voltage perfectly, Millikan was able to balance the force of gravity (which was exerted 
downward) with the force of the electric field on the charged particles (which was exerted upward), 
causing the oil droplets to be suspended in mid-air. A visual representation of the experiment can be seen 
in the figure: 
Millikan then calculated the charge on particles suspended in mid-air. His assumptions were that the force 
of gravity, which is the product of mass (m) and gravitational acceleration (g), was equal to the force of 
the electric field (the product of the charge (q) and the electric field (E)): 
Although the charge of each droplet was unknown, Millikan adjusted the strength of the X-rays ionizing 
the air and measured many values of (q) from many different oil droplets. In each instance, the charge 
measured was a multiple of 1.5924 ×10−19 C. Thus, it was concluded that the elementary electric charge 
was 1.5924 ×10−19 C. 
The results were very accurate. The calculated value from the Oil-Drop Experiment differs by less than 
one percent of the current accepted value of 1.602176487 ×10−19 C. 
The Oil-Drop Experiment was tremendously influential at the time, not only for determining the charge of 
an electron, but for helping prove the existence of particles smaller than atoms. At the time, it was not 
fully accepted that protons, neutrons, and electrons existed. 
Conductors and Insulators 
Some substances readily allow passage of electricity through them, others do not. Those which allow 
electricity to pass through them easily are called conductors. They have electric charges (electrons) that 
are comparatively free to move inside the material. Metals, human and animal bodies and earth are 
conductors. Most of the non-metals like glass, porcelain, plastic, nylon, wood offer high resistance to the 
passage of electricity through them. They are called insulators. Most substances fall into one of the two 
classes stated above. 
When some charge is transferred to a conductor, it readily gets distributed over the entire surface of the 
conductor. In contrast, if some charge is put on an insulator, it stays at the same place. You will learn why 
this happens in the next chapter. This property of the materials tells you why a nylon or plastic comb gets 
electrified on combing dry hair or on rubbing, but a metal article like spoon does not. The charges on 
metal leak through our body to the ground as both are conductors of electricity. When we bring a charged 
3 | P a g e
body in contact with the earth, all the excess charge on the body disappears by causing a momentary 
current to pass to the ground through the connecting conductor (such as our body). This process of 
sharing the charges with the earth is called grounding or earthing. 
Earthing provides a safety measure for electrical circuits and appliances. A thick metal plate is buried 
deep into the earth and thick wires are drawn from this plate; these are used in buildings for the purpose 
of earthing near the mains supply. The electric wiring in our houses has three wires: live, neutral and 
earth. The first two carry electric current from the power station and the third is earthed by connecting it to 
the buried metal plate. Metallic bodies of the electric appliances such as electric iron, refrigerator, TV are 
connected to the earth wire. When any fault occurs or live wire touches the metallic body, the charge 
flows to the earth without damaging the appliance and without causing any injury to the humans; this 
would have otherwise been unavoidable since the human body is a conductor of electricity. 
Static electricity and electric current 
Static electricity and electric current are two separate phenomena, both involving electric charge, and 
may occur simultaneously in the same object. Static electricity is a reference to the electric charge of an 
object and the related electrostatic discharge when two objects are brought together that is not at 
equilibrium. An electrostatic discharge creates a change in the charge of each of the two objects. In 
contrast, electric current is the flow of electric charge through an object, which produces no net loss or 
gain of electric charge. 
Electrification by friction 
Let a piece of glass and a piece of resin, neither of which exhibiting any electrical properties, be rubbed 
together and left with the rubbed surfaces in contact. They will still exhibit no electrical properties. Let 
them be separated. They will now attract each other. 
If a second piece of glass be rubbed with a second piece of resin, and if the piece be then separated and 
suspended in the neighborhood of the former pieces of glass and resin, it may be observed: 
1. That the two pieces of glass repel each other. 
2. That each piece of glass attracts each piece of resin. 
3. That the two pieces of resin repel each other. 
These phenomena of attraction and repulsion are called electrical phenomena, and the bodies that exhibit 
them are said to be 'electrified', or to be 'charged with electricity'. 
Bodies may be electrified in many other ways, as well as by friction. 
The electrical properties of the two pieces of glass are similar to each other but opposite to those of the 
two pieces of resin: The glass attracts what the resin repels and repels what the resin attracts. 
4 | P a g e
No force, either of attraction or of repulsion, can be observed between an electrified body and a body 
nonelectrified. 
Actually, all bodies are electrified, but may appear not to be so by the relative similar charge of 
neighboring objects in the environment. An object further electrified + or - creates an equivalent or 
opposite charge by default in neighboring objects, until those charges can equalize. The effects of 
attraction can be observed in high-voltage experiments, while lower voltage effects are merely weaker 
and therefore less obvious. The attraction and repulsion forces are codified by Coulomb's Law (attraction 
falls off at the square of the distance, which has a corollary for acceleration in a gravitational field, 
suggesting that gravitation may be merely electrostatic phenomenon between relatively weak charges in 
terms of scale). 
Electrification by induction 
Electrostatic induction is a redistribution of electrical charge in an object, caused by the influence of 
nearby charges. Induction was discovered by British scientist John Canton in 1753 and Swedish 
professor Johan Carl Wilcke in 1762. Electrostatic generators, such as the Wimshurst machine, the Van 
de Graaff generator and the electrophorus, use this principle. Induction is also responsible for the 
attraction of light nonconductive objects, such as balloons, paper or Styrofoam scraps, to static electric 
charges. 
A normal uncharged piece of matter has equal numbers of positive and negative electric charges in each 
part of it, located close together, so no part of it has a net electric charge. The positive charges are the 
atoms' nuclei which are bound into the structure of matter and are not free to move. The negative charges 
are the atoms' electrons. In electrically conductive objects such as metals, some of the electrons are able 
to move freely about in the object. 
When a charged object is brought near an uncharged object, electrically conducting object, such as a 
piece of metal, the force of the nearby charge causes a separation of these charges. For example, if a 
positive charge is brought near the object, the electrons in the metal will be attracted toward it and move 
to the side of the object facing it. When the electrons move out of an area, they leave an unbalanced 
positive charge due to the nuclei. This results in a region of negative charge on the object nearest to the 
5 | P a g e
external charge, and a region of positive charge on the part away from it. These are called induced 
charges. If the external charge is negative, the polarity of the charged regions will be reversed. 
Since this process is just a redistribution of the charges that were already in the object, it doesn't change 
the total charge on the object; it still has no net charge. This induction effect is reversible; if the nearby 
charge is removed, the attraction between the positive and negative internal charges causes them to 
intermingle again. 
Induction can be demonstrated using a Gold-leaf Electroscope, which is an instrument for detecting 
electric charge. The electroscope is first discharged, and a charged object is then brought close to the 
instrument's top terminal. Induction causes a redistribution of the charges inside the electroscope's metal 
rod, so that the top terminal gains a net charge of opposite polarity to that of the object, while the gold 
leaves gain a charge of the same polarity. Since both leaves have the same charge, they repel each 
other and spread apart. 
The electroscope has not acquired a net charge: the charge within it has merely been redistributed, so if 
the charge were to be moved away from the electroscope the leaves will come together again. 
But if an electrical contact is now briefly made between the electroscope terminal and ground, for 
example by touching the terminal with a finger, this causes charge to flow from ground to the terminal, 
attracted by the charge on the object close to the terminal. The electroscope now contains a net charge 
opposite in polarity to that of the charged object. When the electrical contact to earth is broken, e.g. by 
lifting the finger, the extra charge that has just flowed into the electroscope cannot escape, and the 
instrument retains a net charge. So the gold leaves remain separated even after the nearby charged 
object is moved away. 
The sign of the charge left on the electroscope after grounding is always opposite in sign to the external 
inducing charge. On the other hand, an opposite permanent charge on an object can be achieved if it is 
grounded from the opposite edge to that which is bearing the external induction charge. 
Basic Properties of Charge 
6 | P a g e 
Gold-leaf electroscope, show ing induction, 
before the terminal is grounded.
(i) Additivity of charges 
•Charges adds up like real numbers i. e., they are Scalars more clearly if any system has n number of 
charges q1, q2, q3, qn then total charge of the system is 
q = q1 + q2 + q3 + ................ qn 
•Proper sign have to be used while adding the charges for example if 
q1 = +1C 
q2 = -2C 
q3 = +4C 
Then total charge of the system is 
q = q1 + q2 + q3 
q = (+1) + (-2) + (+4) C 
q = (+3) C 
(ii) Charge is conserved 
•Charge of an isolated system is conserved. 
•Charge cannot be created or destroyed but charged particles can be created or destroyed. 
(iii) Quantization of charge 
All free charges are integral multiples of a unit of charge e, where e = -1.602 × 10 -19 C i. e., charge on an 
electron or proton. 
Thus charge q on a body is always denoted by 
q = ne 
Where n = any integer positive or negative 
(iv) Invariance 
Like mass, electric charge in a closed system is conserved. As long as a system is impermeable, the 
amount of charge inside it will neither increase nor decrease; it can only be transferred. However, electric 
charge differs from other properties—like mass—in that it is a relativistic invariant. That is, charge 
is independent of speed. The mass of a particle will rise exponentially as its speed approaches that of 
light, its charge, however, will remain constant. 
7 | P a g e
The independence of electric charge from speed was proven through an experiment in which one fast-moving 
helium nucleus (two protons and two neutrons bound together) was proven to have the same 
charge as two separate, slow-moving deuterium nuclei (one proton and one neutron bound together in 
each nucleus). 
From this we get that- 
Coulomb’s Law 
m 
r 
= m 
0 
/ √ (1 - v2/c2) 
Coulomb's law is the law of forces between electric charges. 
Statement- “It states that two stationary point charges q1 and q2 repel or attract each other with a force F 
which is directly proportional to the product of charges and inversely proportional to the square of 
distance between them." 
If the two charges have the same sign, the electrostatic force between them is repulsive; if they have 
different sign, the force between them is attractive. The scalar and vector forms of the mathematical 
equation are- 
8 | P a g e 
& 
The Electric Field 
Suppose we have a point charge q0 located at r and a set of external charges conspire so as to exert a 
force F on this charge. We can define the electric field at the point r by: 
_____________________________________________________________ (1.1) 
The (vector) value of the E field depends only on the values and locations of the external charges, 
because from Coulomb’s law the force on any “test charge” q0 is proportional to the value of the charge.
However to make this definition really kosher we have to stipulate that the tes t charge q0 is “small”; 
otherwise its presence will significantly influence the locations of the external charges. 
Turning Eq. 1.1 around, we can say that if the electric field at some point r has the value E then a small 
charge placed at r will experience a force 
9 | P a g e 
________________________________________________________________ (1.2) 
The electric field is a vector. From Eq. 1.1 we can see that its SI units must be N/C. It follows from 
Coulomb’s law that the electric field at point r due to a charge q located at the origin is given by 
__________________________________________________________ (1.3) 
Where ṝ is the unit vector which points in the same direction as r. 
Electric Field Lines Due to Charged Particle 
From Coulomb’s law we get that- 
 Since electric field varies as inverse of square of the distance that points from the charge the 
vector gets shorter as you go away from the origin and they always points radially outwards. 
 Connecting up these vectors to form a line is a nice way to represent this field. 
 The magnitude of the field is indicated by the density of the field lines. 
 Magnitude is strong near the center where the field lines are close together, and weak farther out, 
where they are relatively apart. 
 So, electric field line is an imaginary line drawn in such a way that its direction at any point is 
same as the direction of field at that point. 
 An electric field line is, in general a curve drawn in such a way that the tangent to it at each point 
is the direction of net field at that point. 
 Field lines of a single position charge points radially outwards while that of a negative charge is 
radially inwards as shown below in the figure.
•Field lines around the system of two positive charges give a different picture and describe the mutual 
repulsion between them. 
10 | P a g e
 Field lines around a system of a positive and negative charge clearly shows the mutual attraction 
between them as shown below in the figure. 
Some important general properties of field lines are: 
•Field lines start from positive charge and end on a negative charge. 
•Field lines never cross each other if they do so then at the point of intersection there will be two direction 
of electric field. 
•Electric field lines do not pass through a conductor, this shows that electric field inside a conductor is 
always zero. 
•Electric field lines are continuous curves in a charge free region. 
Conservation of electric charge: 
 Electric charges can neither be created nor destroyed. According to the law of conservation of 
electric charge, the total charge in an isolated system always remains constant. But the charges 
can be transferred from one part of the system to another, such that the total charge always 
remains conserved. For example, Uranium (92U238) can decay by emitting an alpha particle 
(2He4 nucleus) and transforming to Thorium (90Th234). 
11 | P a g e 
92U238 90Th 234 + 2He4 
 Total charge before decay = +92e, total charge after decay = 90e + 2e. Hence, the total charge is 
conserved i.e. it remains constant.
Electric Dipole 
An electric dipole is a pair of charges of opposite sign (±q) separated by a distance d which is usually 
meant to be small compared to the distance from the charges at which we want to find the electric field. 
The product qd turns out to be important; the vector which points from the −q charge to the +q charge and 
has magnitude qd is known as the electric dipole moment for the pair, and is denoted p. 
Suppose we form an electric dipole by placing a charge +q at (0, 0, d/2) and a charge −q at (0, 0, −d/2). 
One can show that when z is much larger than d, the electric field for points on the z axis is 
12 | P a g e 
__________________________________ (1.4) 
Van de Graaff generator 
A Van de Graaff generator is an electrostatic generator which uses a moving belt to accumulate very high 
amounts of electrical charge on a hollow metal globe on the top of the stand. It was invented by American 
physicist Robert J. Van de Graaff in 1929. The potential difference achieved in modern Van de Graaff 
generators can reach 5 megavolts. A tabletop version can produce on the order of 100,000 volts and can 
store enough energy to produce a visible spark. 
A Van de Graaff generator operates by transferring electric charge from a moving belt to a terminal. First 
invented in 1929, the Van de Graaff generator became a source of high voltage for accelerating 
subatomic particles to high speeds, making it a useful tool for fundamental physics research. 
A simple Van de Graaff-generator consists of a belt of silk, or a similar flexible dielectric material, running 
over two metal pulleys, one of which is surrounded by a hollow metal sphere. Two electrodes, (2) and (7), 
in the form of comb-shaped rows of sharp metal points, are positioned respectively near to the bottom of
the lower pulley and inside the sphere, over the upper pulley. Comb (2) is connected to the sphere, and 
comb (7) to the ground. A high DC potential (with respect to earth) is applied to roller (3); a positive 
potential in this example. 
As the belt passes in front of the lower comb, it receives negative charge that escapes from its points due 
to the influence of the electric field around the lower pulley, which ionizes the air at the points. As the belt 
touches the upper roller (6), it transfers some electrons, leaving the roller with a negative charge (if it is 
insulated from the terminal), which added to the negative charge in the belt generates enough electric 
field to ionize the air at the points of the upper comb. Electrons then leak from the belt to the upper comb 
and to the terminal, leaving the belt positively charged as it returns down and the terminal negatively 
charged. The sphere shields the upper roller and comb from the electric field generated by charges that 
accumulate at the outer surface of it, causing the discharge and change of polarity of the belt at the upper 
roller to occur practically as if the terminal were grounded. As the belt continues to move, a 
constant charging current travels via the belt, and the sphere continues to accumulate negative charge 
until the rate that charge is being lost (through leakage and corona discharges) equals the charging 
current. The larger the sphere and the farther it is from ground, the higher will be its final potential. 
13 | P a g e 
Schematic view of a classical Van de Graaff-generator. 
1) hollow metal sphere 
2) upper electrode 
3) upper roller (for example an acrylic glass) 
4) side of the belt with positive charges 
5) opposite side of the belt with negative charges 
6) lower roller (metal) 
7) lower electrode (ground) 
8) spherical device with negative charges, used to 
discharge the main sphere 
9) spark produced by the difference of potentials
Electric flux 
In electromagnetism, electric flux is the rate of flow of the electric field through a given area. Electric flux 
is proportional to the number of electric lines going through a virtual surface. In other words the number of 
electric lines of force passing through the given surface area which is held perpendicular to the direction 
of electric lines of force is called electric flux. If the electric field is uniform, the electric flux passing 
through a surface of vector area S is 
Where E is the magnitude of the electric field (having units of V/m), S is the area of the surface, and θ is 
the angle between the electric field lines and the normal (perpendicular) to S. For a non-uniform electric 
field, the electric flux dΦE through small surface area dS is given by 
(The electric field, E, multiplied by the component of area perpendicular to the field). The electric flux over 
a surface S is therefore given by the surface integral: 
Where E is the electric field and dS is a differential area on the closed surface S with an outward 
facing surface normal defining its direction. 
For a closed Gaussian surface, electric flux is given by: 
Where- 
E is the electric field, 
S is any closed surface, 
Q is the total electric charge inside the surface S, 
ε0 is the electric constant (a universal constant, also called the "permittivity of free space"). 
This relation is known as Gauss' law for electric field in its integral form and it is one of the four Maxwell's 
equations. 
14 | P a g e
It is important to note that while the electric flux is not affected by charges that are not within the closed 
surface, the net electric field, E, in the Gauss' Law equation, can be affected by charges that lie outside 
the closed surface. While Gauss' Law holds for all situations, it is only useful for "by hand" calculations 
when high degrees of symmetry exist in the electric field. Examples include spherical and cylindrical 
symmetry. 
Electrical flux has SI units of volt meters (V m), or, equivalently, newton meters squared per coulomb (N 
m2 C−1). Thus, the SI base units of electric flux are kg·m3·s−3·A−1. 
Its dimensional formula is [L3MT–1I–1]. 
Gauss's law 
In physics, Gauss's law, also known as Gauss's flux theorem, is a law relating the distribution of electric 
charge to the resulting electric field. 
The law was formulated by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1835, but was not published until 1867. It is one of the 
four Maxwell's equations which form the basis of classical electrodynamics. 
-Qualitative description of the law 
In words, Gauss's law states that: 
The net outward normal electric flux through any closed surface is proportional to the total electric 
charge enclosed within that closed surface. 
Gauss's law has a close mathematical similarity with a number of laws in other areas of physics, such 
as Gauss's law for magnetism and Gauss's law for gravity. In fact, any "inverse-square law" can be 
formulated in a way similar to Gauss's law: For example, Gauss's law itself is essentially equivalent to the 
inverse-square Coulomb's law. 
-Equation involving E field 
Gauss's law can be stated using either the electric field E or the electric displacement field D. This section 
shows some of the forms with E; the form with D is below, as are other forms with E. 
Integral form 
Gauss's law may be expressed as: 
Where ΦE is the electric flux through a closed surface S enclosing any volume V, Q is the 
total charge enclosed within S, and ε0 is the electric constant. The electric flux ΦE is defined as a surface 
integral of the electric field: 
15 | P a g e
Where E is the electric field, dA is a vector representing an infinitesimal element of area and • represents 
the dot product of two vectors. 
Since the flux is defined as an integral of the electric field, this expression of Gauss's law is called 
the integral form. 
In summary, Gauss’s Law is usually used in either of two ways: 
1) Given the field and the surface then enclosed charge can be found. 
2) Given the enclosed charge and sufficient symmetry to choose a convenient surface, then the field can 
be found. 
16 | P a g e 
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Charge and Its Property

  • 1. 1 | P a g e Charge In physics, a charge may refer to one of many different quantities, such as the electric charge in electromagnetism or the color charge in quantum chromodynamics. Charges are associated with conserved quantum numbers. Electric charge Electric charge is the physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when close to other electrically charged matter. There are two types of electric charges, called positive and negative. Positively charged substances are repelled from other positively charged substances, but attracted to negatively charged substances; negatively charged substances are repelled from negative and attracted to positive. An object will be negatively charged if it has an excess of electrons, and will otherwise be positively charged or uncharged. The SI unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C), although in electrical engineering it is also common to use the ampere-hour (Ah), and in chemistry it is common to use the elementary charge (e) as a unit. The symbol Q is often used to denote a charge. The electric charge is a fundamental conserved property of some subatomic particles, which determines their electromagnetic interaction. Electrically charged matter is influenced by, and produces, electromagnetic fields. The interaction between a moving charge and an electromagnetic field is the source of the electromagnetic force, which is one of the four fundamental forces. Twentieth-century experiments demonstrated that electric charge is quantized; that is, it comes in integer multiples of individual small units called the elementary charge, e, approximately equal to 1.602×10−19 coulombs (except for particles called quarks, which have charges that are integer multiples of e/3). The proton has a charge of e, and the electron has a charge of −e. Overview Charge is the fundamental property of forms of matter that exhibit electrostatic attraction or repulsion in the presence of other matter. Electric charge is a characteristic property of many subatomic particles. The charges of free-standing particles are integer multiples of the elementary charge e; we say that electric charge is quantized. Michael Faraday, in his electrolysis experiments, was the first to note the discrete nature of electric charge. Robert Millikan's oil-drop experiment demonstrated this fact directly, and measured the elementary charge. During the formation of macroscopic objects, usually the const ituent atoms and ions will combine in such a manner that they form structures composed of neutral ionic compounds electrically bound to neutral atoms. Thus macroscopic objects tend toward being neutral overall, but macroscopic objects are rarely perfectly net neutral. There are times when macroscopic objects contain ions distributed throughout the material, rigidly bound in place, giving an overall net positive or negative charge to the object. Also, macroscopic objects made of conductive elements, can more or less easily (depending on the element) take on or give off electrons, and then maintain a net negative or positive charge indefinitely. When the net electric charge of an object
  • 2. is non-zero and motionless, the phenomenon is known as static electricity. Charge can easily be produced by rubbing two dissimilar materials together, such as rubbing amber with fur or glass with silk. In this way non-conductive materials can be charged to a significant degree, either positively or negatively. Finding The Charge on e- using MODE i.e. ________Millikan Oil Drop Experiment •The Oil-Drop Experiment involved ionizing droplets of oil as they fell through the air, and balancing the force of gravity with the force of an electric applied by electrodes above and below the droplet. •Millikan could not directly count the number of electrons on each oil droplet, but found that the common denominator between all measured charges was equal to 1.5924 ×10−19 C, and thus concluded that this value was the charge of an electron. •The measured value of an electron's charge, 1.5924 ×10−19 C, differs from the accepted value of 1.602176487 ×10−19 C by less than one percent. Voltage: The amount of electrostatic potential between two points in space. Electric field: A region of space around a charged particle, or between two voltages; it exerts a force on charged objects in its vicinity. Terminal velocity: The speed at which an object in free-fall and not in a vacuum ceases to accelerate downwards because the force of gravity is equal and opposite of the drag force acting against it. The Oil-Drop Experiment: The Oil-Drop Experiment, otherwise known as the Millikan Oil-Drop Experiment, is one of the most influential studies in the history of physical science. Performed by Robert Millikan and Harvey Fletcher in 1911, the experiment was designed to determine the charge of a single electron, otherwise known as the elementary electric charge. Millikan designed his experiment to measure the force on oil droplets between two electrodes. He used an atomizer to spray a mist of tiny oil droplets into a chamber, which included a hole. Some droplets would fall through this hole and into a chamber, where he measured their terminal velocity and calculated their mass. Millikan then exposed the droplets to X-rays, which ionized molecules in the air and caused electrons to attach to the oil droplets, thus making them charged. The top and bottom of the chamber were attached to a battery, and the potential difference between the top and bottom produc ed an electric field that acted on the charged oil drops. 2 | P a g e
  • 3. Adjusting the voltage perfectly, Millikan was able to balance the force of gravity (which was exerted downward) with the force of the electric field on the charged particles (which was exerted upward), causing the oil droplets to be suspended in mid-air. A visual representation of the experiment can be seen in the figure: Millikan then calculated the charge on particles suspended in mid-air. His assumptions were that the force of gravity, which is the product of mass (m) and gravitational acceleration (g), was equal to the force of the electric field (the product of the charge (q) and the electric field (E)): Although the charge of each droplet was unknown, Millikan adjusted the strength of the X-rays ionizing the air and measured many values of (q) from many different oil droplets. In each instance, the charge measured was a multiple of 1.5924 ×10−19 C. Thus, it was concluded that the elementary electric charge was 1.5924 ×10−19 C. The results were very accurate. The calculated value from the Oil-Drop Experiment differs by less than one percent of the current accepted value of 1.602176487 ×10−19 C. The Oil-Drop Experiment was tremendously influential at the time, not only for determining the charge of an electron, but for helping prove the existence of particles smaller than atoms. At the time, it was not fully accepted that protons, neutrons, and electrons existed. Conductors and Insulators Some substances readily allow passage of electricity through them, others do not. Those which allow electricity to pass through them easily are called conductors. They have electric charges (electrons) that are comparatively free to move inside the material. Metals, human and animal bodies and earth are conductors. Most of the non-metals like glass, porcelain, plastic, nylon, wood offer high resistance to the passage of electricity through them. They are called insulators. Most substances fall into one of the two classes stated above. When some charge is transferred to a conductor, it readily gets distributed over the entire surface of the conductor. In contrast, if some charge is put on an insulator, it stays at the same place. You will learn why this happens in the next chapter. This property of the materials tells you why a nylon or plastic comb gets electrified on combing dry hair or on rubbing, but a metal article like spoon does not. The charges on metal leak through our body to the ground as both are conductors of electricity. When we bring a charged 3 | P a g e
  • 4. body in contact with the earth, all the excess charge on the body disappears by causing a momentary current to pass to the ground through the connecting conductor (such as our body). This process of sharing the charges with the earth is called grounding or earthing. Earthing provides a safety measure for electrical circuits and appliances. A thick metal plate is buried deep into the earth and thick wires are drawn from this plate; these are used in buildings for the purpose of earthing near the mains supply. The electric wiring in our houses has three wires: live, neutral and earth. The first two carry electric current from the power station and the third is earthed by connecting it to the buried metal plate. Metallic bodies of the electric appliances such as electric iron, refrigerator, TV are connected to the earth wire. When any fault occurs or live wire touches the metallic body, the charge flows to the earth without damaging the appliance and without causing any injury to the humans; this would have otherwise been unavoidable since the human body is a conductor of electricity. Static electricity and electric current Static electricity and electric current are two separate phenomena, both involving electric charge, and may occur simultaneously in the same object. Static electricity is a reference to the electric charge of an object and the related electrostatic discharge when two objects are brought together that is not at equilibrium. An electrostatic discharge creates a change in the charge of each of the two objects. In contrast, electric current is the flow of electric charge through an object, which produces no net loss or gain of electric charge. Electrification by friction Let a piece of glass and a piece of resin, neither of which exhibiting any electrical properties, be rubbed together and left with the rubbed surfaces in contact. They will still exhibit no electrical properties. Let them be separated. They will now attract each other. If a second piece of glass be rubbed with a second piece of resin, and if the piece be then separated and suspended in the neighborhood of the former pieces of glass and resin, it may be observed: 1. That the two pieces of glass repel each other. 2. That each piece of glass attracts each piece of resin. 3. That the two pieces of resin repel each other. These phenomena of attraction and repulsion are called electrical phenomena, and the bodies that exhibit them are said to be 'electrified', or to be 'charged with electricity'. Bodies may be electrified in many other ways, as well as by friction. The electrical properties of the two pieces of glass are similar to each other but opposite to those of the two pieces of resin: The glass attracts what the resin repels and repels what the resin attracts. 4 | P a g e
  • 5. No force, either of attraction or of repulsion, can be observed between an electrified body and a body nonelectrified. Actually, all bodies are electrified, but may appear not to be so by the relative similar charge of neighboring objects in the environment. An object further electrified + or - creates an equivalent or opposite charge by default in neighboring objects, until those charges can equalize. The effects of attraction can be observed in high-voltage experiments, while lower voltage effects are merely weaker and therefore less obvious. The attraction and repulsion forces are codified by Coulomb's Law (attraction falls off at the square of the distance, which has a corollary for acceleration in a gravitational field, suggesting that gravitation may be merely electrostatic phenomenon between relatively weak charges in terms of scale). Electrification by induction Electrostatic induction is a redistribution of electrical charge in an object, caused by the influence of nearby charges. Induction was discovered by British scientist John Canton in 1753 and Swedish professor Johan Carl Wilcke in 1762. Electrostatic generators, such as the Wimshurst machine, the Van de Graaff generator and the electrophorus, use this principle. Induction is also responsible for the attraction of light nonconductive objects, such as balloons, paper or Styrofoam scraps, to static electric charges. A normal uncharged piece of matter has equal numbers of positive and negative electric charges in each part of it, located close together, so no part of it has a net electric charge. The positive charges are the atoms' nuclei which are bound into the structure of matter and are not free to move. The negative charges are the atoms' electrons. In electrically conductive objects such as metals, some of the electrons are able to move freely about in the object. When a charged object is brought near an uncharged object, electrically conducting object, such as a piece of metal, the force of the nearby charge causes a separation of these charges. For example, if a positive charge is brought near the object, the electrons in the metal will be attracted toward it and move to the side of the object facing it. When the electrons move out of an area, they leave an unbalanced positive charge due to the nuclei. This results in a region of negative charge on the object nearest to the 5 | P a g e
  • 6. external charge, and a region of positive charge on the part away from it. These are called induced charges. If the external charge is negative, the polarity of the charged regions will be reversed. Since this process is just a redistribution of the charges that were already in the object, it doesn't change the total charge on the object; it still has no net charge. This induction effect is reversible; if the nearby charge is removed, the attraction between the positive and negative internal charges causes them to intermingle again. Induction can be demonstrated using a Gold-leaf Electroscope, which is an instrument for detecting electric charge. The electroscope is first discharged, and a charged object is then brought close to the instrument's top terminal. Induction causes a redistribution of the charges inside the electroscope's metal rod, so that the top terminal gains a net charge of opposite polarity to that of the object, while the gold leaves gain a charge of the same polarity. Since both leaves have the same charge, they repel each other and spread apart. The electroscope has not acquired a net charge: the charge within it has merely been redistributed, so if the charge were to be moved away from the electroscope the leaves will come together again. But if an electrical contact is now briefly made between the electroscope terminal and ground, for example by touching the terminal with a finger, this causes charge to flow from ground to the terminal, attracted by the charge on the object close to the terminal. The electroscope now contains a net charge opposite in polarity to that of the charged object. When the electrical contact to earth is broken, e.g. by lifting the finger, the extra charge that has just flowed into the electroscope cannot escape, and the instrument retains a net charge. So the gold leaves remain separated even after the nearby charged object is moved away. The sign of the charge left on the electroscope after grounding is always opposite in sign to the external inducing charge. On the other hand, an opposite permanent charge on an object can be achieved if it is grounded from the opposite edge to that which is bearing the external induction charge. Basic Properties of Charge 6 | P a g e Gold-leaf electroscope, show ing induction, before the terminal is grounded.
  • 7. (i) Additivity of charges •Charges adds up like real numbers i. e., they are Scalars more clearly if any system has n number of charges q1, q2, q3, qn then total charge of the system is q = q1 + q2 + q3 + ................ qn •Proper sign have to be used while adding the charges for example if q1 = +1C q2 = -2C q3 = +4C Then total charge of the system is q = q1 + q2 + q3 q = (+1) + (-2) + (+4) C q = (+3) C (ii) Charge is conserved •Charge of an isolated system is conserved. •Charge cannot be created or destroyed but charged particles can be created or destroyed. (iii) Quantization of charge All free charges are integral multiples of a unit of charge e, where e = -1.602 × 10 -19 C i. e., charge on an electron or proton. Thus charge q on a body is always denoted by q = ne Where n = any integer positive or negative (iv) Invariance Like mass, electric charge in a closed system is conserved. As long as a system is impermeable, the amount of charge inside it will neither increase nor decrease; it can only be transferred. However, electric charge differs from other properties—like mass—in that it is a relativistic invariant. That is, charge is independent of speed. The mass of a particle will rise exponentially as its speed approaches that of light, its charge, however, will remain constant. 7 | P a g e
  • 8. The independence of electric charge from speed was proven through an experiment in which one fast-moving helium nucleus (two protons and two neutrons bound together) was proven to have the same charge as two separate, slow-moving deuterium nuclei (one proton and one neutron bound together in each nucleus). From this we get that- Coulomb’s Law m r = m 0 / √ (1 - v2/c2) Coulomb's law is the law of forces between electric charges. Statement- “It states that two stationary point charges q1 and q2 repel or attract each other with a force F which is directly proportional to the product of charges and inversely proportional to the square of distance between them." If the two charges have the same sign, the electrostatic force between them is repulsive; if they have different sign, the force between them is attractive. The scalar and vector forms of the mathematical equation are- 8 | P a g e & The Electric Field Suppose we have a point charge q0 located at r and a set of external charges conspire so as to exert a force F on this charge. We can define the electric field at the point r by: _____________________________________________________________ (1.1) The (vector) value of the E field depends only on the values and locations of the external charges, because from Coulomb’s law the force on any “test charge” q0 is proportional to the value of the charge.
  • 9. However to make this definition really kosher we have to stipulate that the tes t charge q0 is “small”; otherwise its presence will significantly influence the locations of the external charges. Turning Eq. 1.1 around, we can say that if the electric field at some point r has the value E then a small charge placed at r will experience a force 9 | P a g e ________________________________________________________________ (1.2) The electric field is a vector. From Eq. 1.1 we can see that its SI units must be N/C. It follows from Coulomb’s law that the electric field at point r due to a charge q located at the origin is given by __________________________________________________________ (1.3) Where ṝ is the unit vector which points in the same direction as r. Electric Field Lines Due to Charged Particle From Coulomb’s law we get that-  Since electric field varies as inverse of square of the distance that points from the charge the vector gets shorter as you go away from the origin and they always points radially outwards.  Connecting up these vectors to form a line is a nice way to represent this field.  The magnitude of the field is indicated by the density of the field lines.  Magnitude is strong near the center where the field lines are close together, and weak farther out, where they are relatively apart.  So, electric field line is an imaginary line drawn in such a way that its direction at any point is same as the direction of field at that point.  An electric field line is, in general a curve drawn in such a way that the tangent to it at each point is the direction of net field at that point.  Field lines of a single position charge points radially outwards while that of a negative charge is radially inwards as shown below in the figure.
  • 10. •Field lines around the system of two positive charges give a different picture and describe the mutual repulsion between them. 10 | P a g e
  • 11.  Field lines around a system of a positive and negative charge clearly shows the mutual attraction between them as shown below in the figure. Some important general properties of field lines are: •Field lines start from positive charge and end on a negative charge. •Field lines never cross each other if they do so then at the point of intersection there will be two direction of electric field. •Electric field lines do not pass through a conductor, this shows that electric field inside a conductor is always zero. •Electric field lines are continuous curves in a charge free region. Conservation of electric charge:  Electric charges can neither be created nor destroyed. According to the law of conservation of electric charge, the total charge in an isolated system always remains constant. But the charges can be transferred from one part of the system to another, such that the total charge always remains conserved. For example, Uranium (92U238) can decay by emitting an alpha particle (2He4 nucleus) and transforming to Thorium (90Th234). 11 | P a g e 92U238 90Th 234 + 2He4  Total charge before decay = +92e, total charge after decay = 90e + 2e. Hence, the total charge is conserved i.e. it remains constant.
  • 12. Electric Dipole An electric dipole is a pair of charges of opposite sign (±q) separated by a distance d which is usually meant to be small compared to the distance from the charges at which we want to find the electric field. The product qd turns out to be important; the vector which points from the −q charge to the +q charge and has magnitude qd is known as the electric dipole moment for the pair, and is denoted p. Suppose we form an electric dipole by placing a charge +q at (0, 0, d/2) and a charge −q at (0, 0, −d/2). One can show that when z is much larger than d, the electric field for points on the z axis is 12 | P a g e __________________________________ (1.4) Van de Graaff generator A Van de Graaff generator is an electrostatic generator which uses a moving belt to accumulate very high amounts of electrical charge on a hollow metal globe on the top of the stand. It was invented by American physicist Robert J. Van de Graaff in 1929. The potential difference achieved in modern Van de Graaff generators can reach 5 megavolts. A tabletop version can produce on the order of 100,000 volts and can store enough energy to produce a visible spark. A Van de Graaff generator operates by transferring electric charge from a moving belt to a terminal. First invented in 1929, the Van de Graaff generator became a source of high voltage for accelerating subatomic particles to high speeds, making it a useful tool for fundamental physics research. A simple Van de Graaff-generator consists of a belt of silk, or a similar flexible dielectric material, running over two metal pulleys, one of which is surrounded by a hollow metal sphere. Two electrodes, (2) and (7), in the form of comb-shaped rows of sharp metal points, are positioned respectively near to the bottom of
  • 13. the lower pulley and inside the sphere, over the upper pulley. Comb (2) is connected to the sphere, and comb (7) to the ground. A high DC potential (with respect to earth) is applied to roller (3); a positive potential in this example. As the belt passes in front of the lower comb, it receives negative charge that escapes from its points due to the influence of the electric field around the lower pulley, which ionizes the air at the points. As the belt touches the upper roller (6), it transfers some electrons, leaving the roller with a negative charge (if it is insulated from the terminal), which added to the negative charge in the belt generates enough electric field to ionize the air at the points of the upper comb. Electrons then leak from the belt to the upper comb and to the terminal, leaving the belt positively charged as it returns down and the terminal negatively charged. The sphere shields the upper roller and comb from the electric field generated by charges that accumulate at the outer surface of it, causing the discharge and change of polarity of the belt at the upper roller to occur practically as if the terminal were grounded. As the belt continues to move, a constant charging current travels via the belt, and the sphere continues to accumulate negative charge until the rate that charge is being lost (through leakage and corona discharges) equals the charging current. The larger the sphere and the farther it is from ground, the higher will be its final potential. 13 | P a g e Schematic view of a classical Van de Graaff-generator. 1) hollow metal sphere 2) upper electrode 3) upper roller (for example an acrylic glass) 4) side of the belt with positive charges 5) opposite side of the belt with negative charges 6) lower roller (metal) 7) lower electrode (ground) 8) spherical device with negative charges, used to discharge the main sphere 9) spark produced by the difference of potentials
  • 14. Electric flux In electromagnetism, electric flux is the rate of flow of the electric field through a given area. Electric flux is proportional to the number of electric lines going through a virtual surface. In other words the number of electric lines of force passing through the given surface area which is held perpendicular to the direction of electric lines of force is called electric flux. If the electric field is uniform, the electric flux passing through a surface of vector area S is Where E is the magnitude of the electric field (having units of V/m), S is the area of the surface, and θ is the angle between the electric field lines and the normal (perpendicular) to S. For a non-uniform electric field, the electric flux dΦE through small surface area dS is given by (The electric field, E, multiplied by the component of area perpendicular to the field). The electric flux over a surface S is therefore given by the surface integral: Where E is the electric field and dS is a differential area on the closed surface S with an outward facing surface normal defining its direction. For a closed Gaussian surface, electric flux is given by: Where- E is the electric field, S is any closed surface, Q is the total electric charge inside the surface S, ε0 is the electric constant (a universal constant, also called the "permittivity of free space"). This relation is known as Gauss' law for electric field in its integral form and it is one of the four Maxwell's equations. 14 | P a g e
  • 15. It is important to note that while the electric flux is not affected by charges that are not within the closed surface, the net electric field, E, in the Gauss' Law equation, can be affected by charges that lie outside the closed surface. While Gauss' Law holds for all situations, it is only useful for "by hand" calculations when high degrees of symmetry exist in the electric field. Examples include spherical and cylindrical symmetry. Electrical flux has SI units of volt meters (V m), or, equivalently, newton meters squared per coulomb (N m2 C−1). Thus, the SI base units of electric flux are kg·m3·s−3·A−1. Its dimensional formula is [L3MT–1I–1]. Gauss's law In physics, Gauss's law, also known as Gauss's flux theorem, is a law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field. The law was formulated by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1835, but was not published until 1867. It is one of the four Maxwell's equations which form the basis of classical electrodynamics. -Qualitative description of the law In words, Gauss's law states that: The net outward normal electric flux through any closed surface is proportional to the total electric charge enclosed within that closed surface. Gauss's law has a close mathematical similarity with a number of laws in other areas of physics, such as Gauss's law for magnetism and Gauss's law for gravity. In fact, any "inverse-square law" can be formulated in a way similar to Gauss's law: For example, Gauss's law itself is essentially equivalent to the inverse-square Coulomb's law. -Equation involving E field Gauss's law can be stated using either the electric field E or the electric displacement field D. This section shows some of the forms with E; the form with D is below, as are other forms with E. Integral form Gauss's law may be expressed as: Where ΦE is the electric flux through a closed surface S enclosing any volume V, Q is the total charge enclosed within S, and ε0 is the electric constant. The electric flux ΦE is defined as a surface integral of the electric field: 15 | P a g e
  • 16. Where E is the electric field, dA is a vector representing an infinitesimal element of area and • represents the dot product of two vectors. Since the flux is defined as an integral of the electric field, this expression of Gauss's law is called the integral form. In summary, Gauss’s Law is usually used in either of two ways: 1) Given the field and the surface then enclosed charge can be found. 2) Given the enclosed charge and sufficient symmetry to choose a convenient surface, then the field can be found. 16 | P a g e ****************** ************** ********** ****** *** *