
Concept explainers
When two different materials are rubbed together, do the two materials acquire the same type of charge or different types of charge? Explain how you could justify your answer with a simple experiment.

Whether two materials which are rubbed together acquire similar or opposite charge.
Answer to Problem 1CQ
The two materials which are rubbed together acquire opposite charges.
Explanation of Solution
Electric charge is a conserved quantity. When two materials are rubbed together, one material will lose electron and the other material will gain. So the total electric charge of the two materials remains same. The one which loses electron will become positively charged, while the one who accepts electron will become negatively charged. Thus two materials which are rubbed together acquire opposite charges.
As an example when a glass rod is rubbed in a silk cloth, the glass rod will acquire positive charge while the silk acquires negative charge.
Conclusion:
The two materials which are rubbed together acquire opposite charges.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 12 Solutions
The Physics of Everyday Phenomena
- Don't use ai to answer I will report you answerarrow_forwardwhy did the expert subtract the force exerted by the hand and the elbow by the force due to the weight of the hand and forearm and force exerted by the tricep. Does the order matter and how do you determine what to put first. Question 4 AP, CHAPTER 13 FROM BASIC BIOMECHANICS 8TH EDITIONarrow_forwardThe drawing illustrates the dispersion of light by a prism. The prism is made from a certain type of glass, and has a cross section shaped like an equilateral triangle. The indices of refraction for the red and violet light in this type of glass are 1.649 and 1.694, respectively. The angle of incidence for both the red and violet light is 60.0°. Find the angles of refraction at which the (a) red and (b) violet rays emerge into the air from the prism. Glass prism Incident light Normal (a) Normal Incident light Red (660 nm) (b) Violet (410 nm)arrow_forward
- Don't use ai to answer I will report you answerarrow_forwardA glass block (n = 1.56) is immersed in a liquid. A ray of light within the glass hits a glass- liquid surface at a 70.0° angle of incidence. Some of the light enters the liquid. What is the smallest possible refractive index for the liquid?arrow_forwardThe drawing shows a crystalline slab (refractive index 1.995) with a rectangular cross section. A ray of light strikes the slab at an incident angle of 01 = 35.0°, enters the slab, and travels to point P. This slab is surrounded by a fluid with a refractive index n. What is the maximum value of n such that total internal reflection occurs at point P? Ме Buarrow_forward
- What is the amount of M112 needed to breach a 5-foot thick dense concrete wall utilizing an internal charge placed in the center of the target?arrow_forwardA small postage stamp is placed in front of a concave mirror (radius = 1.1 m), such that the image distance equals the object distance. (a) What is the object distance? (b) What is the magnification of the mirror (with the proper sign)?arrow_forwardCalculate the anti-clockwise torque and the clockwise torque of the system with the ruler and the washers. Record these values in Data Table 5. Ruler = 11.56 g, small washer = 1.85 g, large washer = 24.30 g. Calculate the % Difference in the Torques and record the values in Data Table 5. Is ΣAnticlockwise torque and Anticlockwise torque the same thing, are they solved in the same way?arrow_forward
- A window washer stands on a uniform plank of mass M = 142 kg and length l = 2.80 m supported by 2 ropes attached at the ends of the plank. The window washer has a mass m = 68.0 kg. What is the tension in each of the ropes, T1 and T2, if the window washer's displacement from the center of mass of the plank is x = 0.930 m as shown in Figure 1: Window Washer Problem?arrow_forwardA man holds a double-sided spherical mirror so that he is looking directly into its convex surface, 33 cm from his face. The magnification of the image of his face is +0.17. What will be the image distance when he reverses the mirror (looking into its concave surface), maintaining the same distance between the mirror and his face? Be sure to include the algebraic sign (+ or -) with your answer.arrow_forwardHow do you draw a diagram of the ruler and mass system in equilibrium identifying the anti-clockwise torque and clockwise torque? How do I calculate the anti-clockwise torque and the clockwise torque of the system with the ruler and the washers, does it come from the data in table 4? Please help, thank you!arrow_forward
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax College





