An Introduction to Physical Science
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781305079120
Author: James Shipman, Jerry D. Wilson, Charles A. Higgins, Omar Torres
Publisher: Brooks Cole
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Chapter 8, Problem GM
To determine
To pick the right word from list: A device that steps voltages up and down.
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1. Why do you think charge particles behave like vectors?2. What do you think is the reason charges in this lecture falls under static electricity?3. Describe Coulomb's Law. Why do you think it bears a resemblance to Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation?
1. Which of the following is TRUE about electric charge?a. It can be lost. c. It is created from a chemical reaction.b. It can be destroyed. d. It can be transferred from atom to atom.2. What do you call a closed, continuous path through which electrons can flow?a. circuit c. voltageb. charge d. resistor3. Which of the following is a measure of electrical energy?a. kW c. kWhb. C d. C/s4. A conductor is?a. material that current can pass through c. material that current cannot pass throughb. is magnet d. a type of electric cicuit5. What happens to the resistance of a copper wire when it is heated?a. decreases c. remains the sameb. increases d. any of the above, depending on their individual temperatures6. What circuits has more than one path for current to flow?a. parallel circuit c. simple circuitb. series circuit d. all of the above7. What is the symbols that we used in Electric current?a. V c. Ib. R d. T
1. Coulomb’s Law
a. Is an inverse square law
b. Is equivalent to gravitation
c. Is experimental
d. is sometimes violated
2.Two positive charges separated by distance d, then pushed towards each other to distance d/2.
a. The force is halved
b. The force is quartered
c. The force remains the same
d. The force is quadrupled
3. Two equal but opposite charges are separated by some distance.
a. the charges will approach each other
b. on collision the charges will neutralize each other
c. If fused, the resulting object will heat up
d. all of the above.
4. A conservative force
a. Is path independent
b. Is not affected by friction
c. produces work (Work will be zero)
d. all of the above
Chapter 8 Solutions
An Introduction to Physical Science
Ch. 8.1 - What is the difference between the law of charges...Ch. 8.1 - Prob. 2PQCh. 8.2 - Prob. 1PQCh. 8.2 - Prob. 2PQCh. 8.2 - A coffeemaker draws 10 A of current operating at...Ch. 8.3 - Prob. 1PQCh. 8.3 - Prob. 2PQCh. 8.3 - Prob. 8.2CECh. 8.4 - How are the law of poles and the law of charges...Ch. 8.4 - Where is the Earth's north magnetic pole located?
Ch. 8.5 - What are the two basic principles of...Ch. 8.5 - What's the difference between a motor and a...Ch. 8.5 - Prob. 8.3CECh. 8 - KEY TERMS 1. electric charge (8.1) 2. electrons 3....Ch. 8 - Prob. BMCh. 8 - Prob. CMCh. 8 - Prob. DMCh. 8 - Prob. EMCh. 8 - Prob. FMCh. 8 - Prob. GMCh. 8 - Prob. HMCh. 8 - Prob. IMCh. 8 - Prob. JMCh. 8 - Prob. KMCh. 8 - Prob. LMCh. 8 - Prob. MMCh. 8 - Prob. NMCh. 8 - Prob. OMCh. 8 - Prob. PMCh. 8 - Prob. QMCh. 8 - Prob. RMCh. 8 - Prob. SMCh. 8 - Prob. TMCh. 8 - Prob. UMCh. 8 - Prob. VMCh. 8 - Prob. WMCh. 8 - Prob. XMCh. 8 - Prob. YMCh. 8 - Which of the following has a positive (+) charge?...Ch. 8 - Two equal positive charges are placed equidistant...Ch. 8 - In a dc circuit, how do electrons move? (8.2) (a)...Ch. 8 - What is a unit of voltage? (8.2) (a) joule (b)...Ch. 8 - The ohm is another name for which of the...Ch. 8 - Appliances with heating elements require which of...Ch. 8 - The greatest equivalent resistance occurs when...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8MCCh. 8 - Prob. 9MCCh. 8 - Prob. 10MCCh. 8 - What type of energy conversion does a motor...Ch. 8 - What type of energy conversion does a generator...Ch. 8 - Prob. 13MCCh. 8 - A transformer with more windings on the primary...Ch. 8 - Prob. 1FIBCh. 8 - ___ are neither good conductors nor good...Ch. 8 - Prob. 3FIBCh. 8 - Voltage is defined as work per___. (8.2)Ch. 8 - An electric circuit that is not a complete path is...Ch. 8 - Prob. 6FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 7FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 8FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 9FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 10FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 11FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 12FIBCh. 8 - Prob. 1SACh. 8 - A large charge +Q and a small charge q are a short...Ch. 8 - Explain how a charged rubber comb attracts bits of...Ch. 8 - Why do clothes sometimes stick together when...Ch. 8 - Prob. 5SACh. 8 - Prob. 6SACh. 8 - Prob. 7SACh. 8 - If the drift velocity in a conductor is so small,...Ch. 8 - Prob. 9SACh. 8 - Why are home appliances connected in parallel...Ch. 8 - Compare the safety features of (a) fuses, (b)...Ch. 8 - Prob. 12SACh. 8 - Sometimes resistances in a circuit are described...Ch. 8 - Why do iron filings show magnetic field patterns?Ch. 8 - Compare the law of charges and the law of poles.Ch. 8 - Prob. 16SACh. 8 - What is the principle of an electromagnet?Ch. 8 - (a) What does the Earths magnetic field resemble,...Ch. 8 - Describe the basic principle of a dc electric...Ch. 8 - What happens (a) when a proton moves parallel to a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 21SACh. 8 - Prob. 22SACh. 8 - Prob. 23SACh. 8 - Body injury from electricity depends on the...Ch. 8 - Prob. 1VCCh. 8 - Prob. 1AYKCh. 8 - Prob. 2AYKCh. 8 - Answer both parts of Question 2 for a charge of +1...Ch. 8 - An old saying about electrical safety states that...Ch. 8 - Prob. 5AYKCh. 8 - Prob. 6AYKCh. 8 - Prob. 7AYKCh. 8 - Suppose you are on an expedition to locate the...Ch. 8 - How many electrons make up one coulomb of charge?...Ch. 8 - An object has one million more electrons than...Ch. 8 - What are the forces on two charges of +0.60 C and...Ch. 8 - Find the force of electrical attraction between a...Ch. 8 - There is a net passage of 4.8 1018 electrons by a...Ch. 8 - A current of 1.50 A flows in a conductor for 6.5...Ch. 8 - To separate a 0.25-C charge from another charge,...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8ECh. 8 - If an electrical component with a resistance of 50...Ch. 8 - What battery voltage is necessary to supply 0.50 A...Ch. 8 - A car radio draws 0.25 A of current in the autos...Ch. 8 - A flashlight uses batteries that add up to 3.0 V...Ch. 8 - How much does it cost to run a 1500-W hair dryer...Ch. 8 - Prob. 14ECh. 8 - A 24- component is connected to a 12-V battery....Ch. 8 - Prob. 16ECh. 8 - The heating element of an iron operates at 110 V...Ch. 8 - A 100-W light bulb is turned on. It has an...Ch. 8 - Two resistors with values of 25 and 35 ,...Ch. 8 - Prob. 20ECh. 8 - A student in the laboratory connects a 10-...Ch. 8 - Prob. 22ECh. 8 - A 30.0- resistor and a 60.0- resistor in series...Ch. 8 - A 30.0- resistor and a 60.0- resistor in parallel...Ch. 8 - Prob. 25ECh. 8 - A transformer has 600 turns on its primary and 200...Ch. 8 - A transformer with 1000 turns in its primary coil...Ch. 8 - A power company transmits current through a...
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- In the Millikan oil-drop experiment illustrated in Figure 15.21, an atomizer (a sprayer with a fine nozzle) is used to introduce many tiny droplets of oil between two oppositely charged parallel metal plates. Some of the droplets pick up one or more excess electrons. The charge on the plates is adjusted so that the electric force on the excess electrons exactly balances the weight of the droplet. The idea is to look for a droplet dial has the smallest electric force and assume it has only one excess electron. This strategy lets the observer measure the charge on the electron. Suppose we are using an electric field of 3 104 N/C. The charge on one electron is about 1.6 1019 C. Estimate the radius of an oil drop of density 858 kg/m5 for which its weight could be balanced by the electric force of this field on one electron. (Problem 42 is courtesy of E.F. Redish. For more problems of this type, visit www.physics.umd.cdu/pcrg/.)arrow_forwardWhat are the signs of the charges on the particles in Figure 22.46?arrow_forwardIn 1911, Ernest Rutherford and his assistants Geiger and Marsden conducted an experiment in which they scattered alpha particles (nuclei of helium atoms) from thin sheets of gold. An alpha particle, having charge +2e and mass 6.64 10-27 kg, is a product of certain radioactive decay's. The results of the experiment led Rutherford to the idea that most of an atoms mass is in a very small nucleus, with electrons in orbit around it. (This is the planetary model of the atom, which well study in Chapter 42.) Assume an alpha particle, initially very far from a stationary gold nucleus, is fired with a velocity of 2.00 107 m/s directly toward the nucleus (charge +79e). What is the smallest distance between the alpha particle and the nucleus before the alpha particle reverses direction? Assume the gold nucleus remains stationary.arrow_forward
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