College Physics
11th Edition
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Chapter1: Units, Trigonometry. And Vectors
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1CQ: Estimate the order of magnitude of the length, in meters, of each of the following; (a) a mouse, (b)...
Related questions
Question
A particle could have a charge of
a
|
0.8 × 10-19 C |
b
|
1.2 × 10-19 C |
c
|
3.2 × 10-19 C |
d
|
4.1 × 10-19 C |
e
|
1.0 X 10-19 C |

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Question 2 (4 points)
Step 1: Polarization
Step 2: Charging
+ ++++
+ ++ ++
A neutral aluminum pie tin is charged by induction.
Step 1: The neutral pie tin is brought near a positively-charged acrylic board.
Step 2: While the pie tin is held near the board, it is touched by a finger.
The result is that pie tin becomes charged.
How did the pie tin become polarized?
What charge did it acquire and how?
Word Bank:
Electrons move from the acrylic board to the pie tin. Protons move from the acrylic board to the pie tin.
Electrons in the pie tin move away from the acrylic board.
Protons move from the acrylic board into the pie tin. The pie tin becomes positive.
Electrons move from the pie tin to the finger. The pie tin becomes positive.
Protons move from the pie tin to the finger. The pie tin becomes negative.
Protons move from the finger into the pie tin. The pie tin becomes positive.
Electrons move from the acrylic board into the pie tin. The pie tin becomes negative.
Protons in the pie tin move towards the acrylic board.
Electrons in the pie tin move towards the acrylic board.
Electrons move from the finger into the pie tin. The pie tin becomes negative.
Protons move from the pie tin into the acrylic board. The pie tin becomes negative.
Protons in the pie tin move away from the acrylic board. Protons move from the pie tin to the acrylic board.
Electrons move from the pie tin into the acrylic board. The pie tin becomes positive.
Electrons move from the pie tin to the acrylic board.
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