Capiert Posted July 6, 2017 Posted July 6, 2017 (edited) You assume the (Coulomb's) electric force is a "constant" wrt the distance d between the 2 capacitor plates (e.g. for linac acceleration). But how can that be? I.e. When the equipotential (e.g. the (surface_)charge_density (sigma=charge/area)) in the middle between the plates is zero! Due to a "bipolar" Gauss (surface_charge) law sum, each plate receives half the voltage V/2, but has opposite polarity (i.e. +V/2 & -V/2) so the sum is the total voltage V between the 2 plates, but zero (voltage) in the middle of the air dielectric. Surely a "non_linear" acceleration must exist (instead) wrt distance between the 2 plates because "zero potential" difference (at the dielectrric middle) has no driving force. (=Net (+/-) force equals zero!) Or does it? E.g. The force near the plates is maximum; but is minimum (=zero) in the middle (between the 2 plates). Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
Sensei Posted July 6, 2017 Posted July 6, 2017 (edited) but how can that be Oil drop is levitating. This is what you can see on your own eyes. This device should be presented to the all primary school students. Prior even learning about Coulomb's force. So, what are you asking.. ? Get device, and check results. This is not "theoretical physics". Edited July 6, 2017 by Sensei
Capiert Posted July 6, 2017 Author Posted July 6, 2017 (edited) I'm asking about the oil drops(' accelerated) speed. (Is that speed linearly or non_linearly accelerated?) Are they (=those oil drops) non_linear(ly accelerated, wrt position, e.g. height)? If the(ir accelerating) force (F=m*a) is NOT linear wrt distance, then the(ir) acceleration (a=F/m) can NOT be (linear wrt distance) either. I apologize for the spelling typo, the title should read "Millikan's.." (not Milikan). Edited July 6, 2017 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 6, 2017 Posted July 6, 2017 You assume the (Coulomb's) electric force is a "constant" wrt the distance d between the 2 capacitor plates (e.g. for linac acceleration). But how can that be? I.e. When the equipotential (e.g. the (surface_)charge_density (sigma=charge/area)) in the middle between the plates is zero! Due to a "bipolar" Gauss (surface_charge) law sum, each plate receives half the voltage V/2, but has opposite polarity (i.e. +V/2 & -V/2) so the sum is the total voltage V between the 2 plates, but zero in the middle of the air dielectric. Surely a "non_linear" acceleration must exist (instead) wrt distance between the 2 plates because "zero potential" difference (at the dielectrric middle) has no driving force. (=Net (+/-) force equals zero!) Or does it? E.g. The force near the plates is maximum; but is minimum (=zero) in the middle (between the 2 plates). How does the potential difference relate to force?
Capiert Posted July 6, 2017 Author Posted July 6, 2017 (edited) The force (applied to the (oil drop's) charge q) is directly proportional to the voltage V (=potential "difference"). & the middle (=in between the 2 plates) of any (functionable) capacitor, is always 0 V(olts, potential difference) no matter what voltage (below its limit(ing voltage (rating)), to avoid damage) is applied. Charged, or uncharged! (Thus is there NO (electrical) acceleration there?) The potential difference (=voltage) is V=E*d. The electric field E=V/d is the (potential difference=) voltage V divided by distance d, & the Coulomb's electric force F=q*E is the charge q multiplied by the electric field E (=Q/(Epsilon_o*Spherical_Area)=Q//(Epsilon_o*4*Pi*(r^2))). So the force F=q*V/d is the charge q multiplied by the (potential difference=) voltage V divided by the (charge's) distance d (e.g. away from the electric field's (source) charge Q. In that case (((it is) the distance) away from) a capacitor plate). Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
Strange Posted July 7, 2017 Posted July 7, 2017 What connection is there between capacitors and Millican's experiment?
Capiert Posted July 7, 2017 Author Posted July 7, 2017 (edited) Millikan used a voltage applied to 2 plates that are spaced with air distance d. That is a simple capacitor (to me) C=Epsilon*A/d (with Area A & having an applied voltage). i.e. The (=his) capacitor was charged. Thus he used the electric field of a capacitor with the dielectric, air. Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 7, 2017 Posted July 7, 2017 On 7/6/2017 at 7:11 PM, Capiert said: The force (applied to the (oil drop's) charge q) is directly proportional to the voltage V (=potential "difference"). & the middle (=in between the 2 plates) of any (functionable) capacitor, is always 0 V(olts, potential difference) no matter what voltage (below its limit(ing voltage (rating)), to avoid damage) is applied. Charged, or uncharged! (Thus is there NO (electrical) acceleration there?) The potential difference (=voltage) is V=E*d. The electric field E=V/d is the (potential difference=) voltage V divided by distance d, & the Coulomb's electric force F=q*E is the charge q multiplied by the electric field E (=Q/(Epsilon_o*Spherical_Area)=Q//(Epsilon_o*4*Pi*(r^2))). So the force F=q*V/d is the charge q multiplied by the (potential difference=) voltage V divided by the (charge's) distance d (e.g. away from the electric field's (source) charge Q. In that case (((it is) the distance) away from) a capacitor plate). You have a d in your equation for V. That should be a clue. Also the name: potential difference IOW, while V has a value at some position, it is always in reference to some other point. This is like potential energy, or speed — you can always define the place (or frame) where the value is zero. It's only the difference in value between points that matters. We could just as easily choose some other reference point such that 0V is not at the center between the plates, but the potential difference will not change. The potential difference between the plates is still V. There is no valid application of this formula that says that E = 0 anywhere between the plates. And F = qE. As long as there is a field, there is a force.
Capiert Posted July 7, 2017 Author Posted July 7, 2017 (edited) My question was aimed at the (net) force intensity (onto the charged oil drop q) wrt position in the middle between the 2 plates, based on the surface_charge_density (sigma=Q/A) of the 2 opposite polarity plates (e.g. +Q/A, & -Q/A). From what I see, that force is zero. The (net) surface_charge_density is zero in the middle between both plates. Thus little (=zero) affect. (Otherwise, apparently uncharged objects would appear to attract (& repel) other objects, without electrostatic( law)s. A form of gravitation, & anti_gravitation (e.g. levitation)?) I suppose you will maintain that the negative plate would repel a negative charged oil drop; & the positive plate would continue to attract that same drop (thus ignoring a ((volume)_charge_density rho=Q/vol) cancelation effect), so that a (constant) continuum of force exists (wrt position between the plates). Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 7, 2017 Posted July 7, 2017 My question was aimed at the (net) force intensity (onto the charged oil drop q) wrt position in the middle between the 2 plates, based on the surface_charge_density (sigma=Q/A) of the 2 opposite polarity plates (e.g. +Q/A, & -Q/A). From what I see, that force is zero. The (net) surface_charge_density is zero in the middle between both plates. Thus little (=zero) affect. What you see is wrong. You cannot equate force with a voltage at a particular point. (Otherwise, apparently uncharged objects would appear to attract (& repel) other objects, without electrostatic( law)s. I have no idea how you come to that conclusion. I suppose you will maintain that the negative plate would repel a negative charged oil drop; & the positive plate would continue to attract that same drop (thus ignoring a ((volume)_charge_density rho=Q/vol) cancelation effect), so that a (constant) continuum of force exists (wrt position between the plates). That would be a valid way of looking at it (other than whatever you mean by a volume charge density cancellation effect)
Capiert Posted July 7, 2017 Author Posted July 7, 2017 (edited) [Ref Swansont's "no idea..". PS: How do I get "quote" "copy & paste" to work in Windows explorer too on this website, instead of iPad?] I equate the force is proportional to a (volume) charge_density "difference" (between (the charged oil_drop) q & the plates total (+ & -) affect, considering q has its own charge_density=cd). If the volume_charge_densities are different (between q & its position), then they (both q & its position's cd) will attempt to equalize causing charge_flow (i.e. the oil_drop will (be forced to) move). That is the motivating force, (that moves the (bound) mass (of the charge)), the mechanism why it works, =moves (the charged oil drop mass). (The charges attempt to equally space (& distance) from 1 another because they all repell.) The volume_charge_density's "cancelation effect" is just another way to express the (Gauss's law) surface_charge_density's cancelation effect, when positive & negative (surface_charge_densities sigma=Q/A) overlap (onto the same position). "Surface (charge_density)" is the (simplified) math theory (trick=technique, model), that (2D, charge per 2D area) means (=implies) the real (=physical, =3D) charge per volume (rho). Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 7, 2017 Posted July 7, 2017 [Ref Swansont's "no idea..". PS: How do I get "quote" "copy & paste" to work in Windows explorer too on this website, instead of iPad?] I equate the force is proportional to a (volume) charge_density "difference" (between (the charged oil_drop) q & the plates total (+ & -) affect, considering q has its own charge_density=cd). If the volume_charge_densities are different (between q & its position), then they (both q & its position's cd) will attempt to equalize causing charge_flow (i.e. the oil_drop will (be forced to) move). That is the motivating force, (that moves the (bound) mass (of the charge)), the mechanism why it works, =moves (the charged oil drop mass). The volume_charge_density's "cancelation effect" is just another way to express the (Gauss's law) surface_charge_density's cancelation effect, when positive & negative overlap (onto the same position). "Surface (charge_density)" is the (simplified) math theory (trick=technique, model), that (2D) means (=implies) the real (=physical, =3D) charge per volume (rho). There is no overlap of charge, there is no cancellation. There are + charges on one plate, and - charges on the other. They are physically separated.
Capiert Posted July 7, 2017 Author Posted July 7, 2017 (edited) The (capacitor's) plates are physically separated (naturally, no argument there); but the(ir) (positive & negative, as) "sum" of their surface_charges (sigma=+/- Q/A) at the "position" of the oil drop has a cancelation effect (=resulting total, which is less (than a single plate)). Edited July 7, 2017 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 7, 2017 Posted July 7, 2017 The (capacitor's) plates are physically separated (naturally, no argument there); but the(ir) (positive & negative, as) "sum" of their surface_charges (sigma=+/- Q/A) at the "position" of the oil drop has a cancelation effect (=resulting total, which is less (than a single plate)). No, it absolutely does not have a cancellation effect. You cannot sum the charges in this situation. The only way you could look at them as cancelling is if you are very far away from the capacitor plates. But that is decidedly not true for an oil drop that is between the plates.
Manticore Posted July 8, 2017 Posted July 8, 2017 You need to look at the charge gradient - not the actual charge relative to the external world.
Capiert Posted July 9, 2017 Author Posted July 9, 2017 (edited) I assume, a charge gradient can be the difference wrt distance (position) of (either) the surface_charge_density sigma=Q/A (or the volume_charge_density rho=Q/vol). Isn't the charge gradient maximum near the plates; & minimum in the middle between the 2 plates? Is not the (electric) potential maximum at each plate; but minimum in the middle (between both plates), because of opposite polarities? Is not the electric_potential zero in the middle as an equipotential? I.e. (both potentials are the) same amount, but opposite polarity. Does not positive potential cancel negative (potential) at the same position (of overlap)? (Otherwise, zero (=neutral) charge would never exist, anywhere. A discharged capacitor would NOT be possible! But we don't see that (impossible neutrality). Instead we see that things can be charged (up), & (can be) discharged. E.g. A thing is either charged, or not (=neutral). The (dielectric's) polarization in the middle of the capacitor is minimum (e.g. zero); but maximum nearest the plates (having the opposite polarity of a nearby plate). Edited July 9, 2017 by Capiert
John Cuthber Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 I assume, a charge gradient can be the difference wrt distance (position) of (either) the surface_charge_density sigma=Q/A (or the volume_charge_density rho=Q/vol). Isn't the charge gradient maximum near the plates; & minimum in the middle between the 2 plates? No That's why, when it comes down to it, the experiment works.
swansont Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 I assume, a charge gradient can be the difference wrt distance (position) of (either) the surface_charge_density sigma=Q/A (or the volume_charge_density rho=Q/vol). There is no charge gradient, as such. There is charge at two positions. It is not distributed along the path. A charge gradient anywhere along that path is zero. Stop making up physics. Read a text book.
Capiert Posted July 9, 2017 Author Posted July 9, 2017 Well then I'm sorry but I do NOT know what Manticore meant by "charge gradient". I could find nothing on the topic.
swansont Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 I think "difference" or "differential" would have been the appropriate term.
Capiert Posted July 9, 2017 Author Posted July 9, 2017 Then may we continue there? I.e. The difference of charge density.
Sensei Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 (edited) Well then I'm sorry but I do NOT know what Manticore meant by "charge gradient". I could find nothing on the topic. Charged particle, charged object, charged plate, creates electric field: [math]F=q_1 E[/math] [math]E=k_e \frac{q_2}{r^2}[/math] Change r-distance, and you have gradient. It's the best to visualize in some 3D software, as 3D array of arrows, which have different length, or color, to indicate their strengths (scalar), and pointing in some direction (vector) (up or down, mostly, in the case of this experiment). [math]\vec{F}=q_1 \vec{E}[/math] [math]\vec{E}=k_e \frac{q_2}{\vec{r}^2}[/math] What you're interested in oil-drop experiment, is when Coulomb's force is cancelled by gravitation force (both force scalars at some point, have the same magnitude, but reverse vectors). Edited July 9, 2017 by Sensei
Mordred Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 (both force scalars at some point, have the same magnitude, but reverse vectors). Your wording is incorrect here. It should be force vectors with same magnitude but reverse directions
Sensei Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 Your wording is incorrect here. It should be force vectors with same magnitude but reverse directions I made shortcut "reverse vectors" = "reverse directions of vectors"
Mordred Posted July 9, 2017 Posted July 9, 2017 Your first term force scalar is magnitude only. Its a vector magnitude+direction.
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