Examples of Pickett's Charge in the following topics:
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- The main event was a dramatic infantry assault by 12,500 Confederates against the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge, known as Pickett's Charge.
- The charge was repulsed by Union rifle and artillery fire at great losses to the Confederate army.
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- The electric field of a point charge is, like any electric field, a vector field that represents the effect that the point charge has on other charges around it.
- If the charge is positive, as shown above, the electric field will be pointing in a positive radial direction from the charge q (away from the charge).
- This means that because the charges are both positive and will repel one another, the force on the test charge points away from the original charge.
- If the test charge were negative, the force felt on that charge would be:
- The electric field of a positively charged particle points radially away from the charge.
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- In both instances, charged particles will experience a force when in the presence of other charged matter.
- The SI unit for charge is the Coulomb (C), which is approximately equal to $6.24\times 10^{18}$ elementary charges.
- (An elementary charge is the magnitude of charge of a proton or electron. )
- In physics, charge conservation is the principle that electric charge can neither be created nor destroyed.
- The net quantity of electric charge, the amount of positive charge minus the amount of negative charge in the universe, is always conserved.
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- The electric field of a point charge is, like any electric field, a vector field that represents the effect that the point charge has on other charges around it.
- This means that because the charges are both positive and will repel one another, the force on the test charge points away from the original charge.
- If the test charge were negative, the force felt on that charge would be
- This makes sense because opposite charges attract and the force on the test charge will tend to push it toward the original positive charge creating the field.
- The electric field of a positively charged particle points radially away from the charge.
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- In the presence of charge or an electric field, the charges in a conductor will redistribute until they reach static equilibrium.
- Conductors are materials in which charges can move freely.
- If conductors are exposed to charge or an electric field, their internal charges will rearrange rapidly.
- Negative charges in the conductor will align themselves towards the positive end of the electric field, leaving positive charges at the negative end of the field.
- Describe behavior of charges in a conductor in the presence of charge or an electric field and under static equilibrium
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- Electrostatic induction is the redistribution of charges within an object that occurs as a reaction to the presence of a nearby charge.
- Electrostatic induction is the redistribution of charge within an object, which occurs as a reaction to a nearby charge.
- As such, it has no net charge.
- In such an event, the electrons in the neutral object move (the protons are relatively inert) according to the charge of the nearby charged object (inductor).
- Total charge is conserved, and that of the inductor decreases as it transfers charge to its subject.
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- Since they are located radially around a charged body, they are perpendicular to electric field lines, which extend radially from the center of a charged body.
- For a single, isolated point charge, the formula for potential (V) is functionally dependent upon charge (Q) and inversely dependent upon radial distance from the charge (r):
- Therefore, equipotential lines for a single point charge are circular, with the point charge at the center .
- When multiple, discrete charges interact, their fields overlap.
- At a point between the charges, a test charge may "feel" the effects of both charges.
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- Charge separation, often referred to as static electricity, is the building of space between particles of opposite charges.
- All matter is composed of atoms made up of negatively-charged electrons and positively-charged protons.
- Thus, the opposite charges attract.
- Charge separation can be created not only by friction, but by pressure, heat, and other charges.
- Charge separation occurs often in the natural world.
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- But what if another charge is introduced?
- When modeling the electric fields of multiple charges, it's important to take into consideration the sign and magnitude of each charge.
- This means that if charges q1 (with a +1 value) q2 (+2 charge) and q3 (+3 charge) are in the same field, one can connect 4, 8, and 12 field lines, respectively, to the charges.
- Field lines should always point away from positive charges and towards negative charge.
- Calculate the resultant force of the multiple electric charges on a test charge
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- Electric fields are found around electric charges and help determine the direction and magnitude of force the charge exerts on a nearby charged particle.
- Therefore, they can facilitate the flow of charge, or current.
- There is no electric field inside a charged conductor.
- A charged conductor at electrostatic equilibrium will contain charges only on its outer surface and will have no net electric field within itself.
- This is because all the charges in such a conductor will symmetrically oppose other charges within the conductor, causing the net result to sum to 0.