4.0 Electrical Charge

2026-05-17 20:32

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Electrical Charge

Conservation of Change

Before any Elementary discussion of Electromagnetic's happens, it is important to discuss the Law of Conservation of Change.

Conductors and Insulators

Conductors - Electrons can move around freely
Insulator - Electrons CANNOT move around freely

Quick rundown on WHY:
Since like charges repel, in conductors, the electrons move to the edges, while in Insulators, the electrons get STUCK and cannot further move

Charge by Induction

Suppose we have two charged rods, where the left one is clearly more negatively charged
GroundNegative Charges Moving Down
Whats interesting, is that if we cut off the wire connecting the affected rod, we actually leave a net positive charge in it permanently.

Charges

The elementary unit of charge is (e), which is the charge of a single proton. A charge of an electron could be represented as -e
The unit of charges is measured through the coulomb (C).

Unit Conversions

Coloumbs law

Suppose we have two charges at a given distance.
Coulombs Law states:

Fe=keq1q2r2

Fe is the force of electricity, ke is the proportionality variable, q1, q2 are charges and r2 is simply distance between them squared

References

4.1 Electric Fields