Rabu, 26 Februari 2014
Minggu, 09 Februari 2014
So, What is ELECTRIC CHARGE ?
Electric charge is the physical property (?) of matter that causes it to experience a force when close to other electrically charged matter. There are two types of electric charges – positive and negative.
Positively charged substances are repelled from other positively
charged substances, but attracted to negatively charged substances;
negatively charged substances are repelled from negative and attracted
to positive. An object will be negatively charged if it has an excess of
electrons, and will otherwise be positively charged or uncharged. The SI derived unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C), although in electrical engineering it is also common to use the ampere-hour (Ah), and in chemistry it is common to use the elementary charge (e) as a unit. The symbol Q is often used to denote a charge. The study of how charged substances interact is classical electrodynamics, which is accurate insofar as quantum effects can be ignored.
Electric charge generates
electric field. The electric charge influence other
electric charges with electric force and influenced by the other
charges with the same force in the opposite direction. There are 2 types of electric charge:
Positive charge (+)
Positive charge has more protons than electrons (Np>Ne).Positive charge is denoted with plus (+) sign.
The positive charge attracts other negative charges and repels other positive charges.
The positive charge is attracted by other negative charges and repelled by other positive charges.
Negative charge (-)
Negative charge has more electrons than protons (Ne>Np).Negative charge is denoted with minus (-) sign.
Negative charge attracts other positive charges and repels other negative charges.
The negative charge is attracted by other positive charges and repelled by other negative charges.
Electric force (F) direction according to charge type
q1/q2 charges | Force on q1 charge | Force on q2 charge | |
---|---|---|---|
- / - | ←⊝ | ⊝→ | repletion |
+ / + | ←⊕ | ⊕→ | repletion |
- / + | ⊝→ | ←⊕ | attraction |
+ / - | ⊕→ | ←⊝ | attraction |
Charge of elementary particles
Particle | Charge (C) | Charge (e) |
---|---|---|
Electron | 1.602×10-19 C |
-e
|
Proton | 1.602×10-19 C |
+e
|
Neutron | 0 C | 0 |
Coulomb unit
The electric charge is measured with the unit of Coulomb [C].One coulomb has the charge of 6.242×1018 electrons:
1C = 6.242×1018 e
Electric charge is a component of atoms. In other words, after we have
broken an object into molecules, and broken the molecules into atoms, when
we break the atoms apart we discover particles of electric charge. Charge
is material, it is like atoms but it is one step lower than atoms. Most
science textbooks tell us that solid objects are made of atoms. It is
also valid to state that solid objects are made of electric charge.
Objects are made of equal quantities of positive and negative charge, and
objects stay together because of the attraction between the quantities of
opposite charge inside them. Chemical bonds are electrical in
nature.
Charge flow
When charge moves, what do we call it? Well, if the positive and negative
charges move along together, we call it "physical motion." Since matter
is composed of charge-carrying particles, all physical motion is a motion
of charge, but in most cases both the
negative and the positive charges move along as one. On the other hand,
whenever opposite charges move
separately, that's when interesting things occur. Opposite charges
moving along together are "mechanical", while opposite charges moving
differently are "electrical." If the negative charge
in an object should start moving while the object's positive charge stays
at rest, then we call that motion a flow of electricity, or an
electric current. The words
"electric current" mean the same as "charge flow."
Charge: it's not energy
Charge is not energy. A fixed quantity of charge can possess many
different amounts of energy at the same time (and note the same charge in
different values of capacitor.) Also, if you know the amount of charge
present, you have no knowledge of the amount of energy. Also, charge and
energy move differently: in AC cables the charges sit in one spot and
slowly wiggle, while the energy flows across the circuit at almost the
speed of light. (Insight: charge is different from electrical energy in
thesame way that air is different from sound waves.) Inside electric
circuits, charge flows slowly in a circle like a drive belt, while energy
moves quickly from the source to the load. Some people think that since
charge and electrical energy are mysterious and invisible, they must be
the same thing. But see below: electrical energy is invisible, but charge
is definitely VISIBLE. And finally, J. C. Maxwell points
out that charge
and energy MUST be two different things, since the amount energy is
calculated by multiplying the amount of charge by the voltage of that
charge.
If charge is not energy, then what exactly is it? Well, a block of iron
can be lifted above the Earth in order to store potential energy, or it
can be spun rapidly to store kinetic energy, but the mass of the iron is
not the energy being stored. So there's our answer by analogy: "charge"
is a concept very similar to "mass." We can store potential energy by
forcibly separating the opposite charges in a capacitor, or we can store
kinetic energy by forcing the charges in a copper inductor to spin around
the spiral windings. But charge stays constant while doing this, and mass
stays constant when lifting or spinning an iron disk. (Yes yes Einstein,
but at this level of Classical chysics, Relativity is still just a
distraction. And, we don't have to double the weight of a flywheel in
order to double the KE stored by its spinning motion!)
Charge: not just a property, but also "a stuff."
Charge is just a property, so how can a property move from place to place?
Well, the same is true of mass. Mass is a property, but it also behaves
like "a stuff" which can be moved around. Fortunately we have a term for
properties which act like stuff. They're called "conserved quantities."
Mass is a conserved quantity: in order to get rid of mass inside an
enclosure, we can't just make it vanish, instead we must take that mass
past the walls of the enclosure. Charge is like mass: a conserved
quantity, "a stuff." This is very different than non-conserved
properties. The color blue is a property of a painted object, but "blue"
can easily vanish: just heat the object so the blue is burned to black!
Mass and charge are different: we can't easily get rid of them, instead we
must remove them. (In more rigorous language, a conserved quantity is one
which, in order to change the amount inside a closed "Gaussian" surface,
we must pass it through that surface.) So, charge is a "stuff-like"
property. It's a mistake to think it's anything like the blue color of
paint, or to call it "just a property."
Charge is "poles"
When the positive and negative charges of matter are sorted out and pulled
away from each other, "static electricity" is the result. When (+) is
pulled away from (-), an invisible force field connects them and causes
them to attract each other. This field is similar to magnetism in many
ways, but it is not magnetism, it is called an Electrostatic Field, or
"e-field." With magnetism, the lines of force spring from the north and
south poles of magnets, and these lines seem to connect the opposite
magnetic poles together. In Electrostatics, the electrical lines of force
connect the (+) and (-) poles together. What is charge? It is the
"pole" where the electrical lines of force come to an end. Follow the
lines of a static "e-field" along, and eventually you'll arrive at a small
bit of "charge." Electric charge is the glue which attaches the flux
lines of e-field to the particles of matter.
Charge: it's not invisible
Charge is not invisible. Whenever light bounces off an object, it
bounces off the outside of the atom, and the outside of an atom is made of
negative charges.
In other words, electric charge reflects light. Yet when we rub a
balloon on our
hair, the balloon (and the hair) don't look different. How can charge be
visible if we see no visible difference when we electrify a
balloon? Simple: the balloon's excess charge is way too
small. The imbalanced charge caused by rubbing a balloon on your head is
like a teacup poured into the ocean: it is very tiny when compared to the
charge which is already there. The balloon is made of charge, and
the amount of charge that is added or removed by the hair is incredibly
small. If we could add a billion times more charge to that "charged up"
balloon, then we would see some changes in its color. But the poor
balloon would instantly explode violently outwards because alike charges
on its surface would fiercely repel each other. (Here's a clue: when a
significant portion of the positive charges in a block of Uranium become
disconnected and fly away from each other, that's called a nuclear
explosion.)
Here is a way to see charge directly: look at the surface of a wire.
Metals look metallic because they contain a "fluid" composed of movable
electrons. This electrical "fluid" is an excellent reflector of light
waves, and it causes the surfaces of metals to act like mirrors. It's
these same electrons which flow during an electric current. The "silvery"
stuff of a metal is the charge. What is charge? It is a "silver
liquid" which is found in all metals, and which can be forced to flow.
Even though the charge is visible, its flow is not. Look carefully at
wires in an operating electric circuit and you won't see anything moving
along. This is not very mysterious: stir a glass of water and then look
for the flowing motion. You'll see moving bubbles and perhaps moving
specks of dirt, but you won't see the water move. The silvery
charge-fluid in a wire has no bubbles or dirt, so even though the charge
is visible, we cannot tell if it is moving or still.
The diagram below
shows a lithium atom with its 3 electrons and 3 protons (and three uncharged
neutrons). Also shown is a positive lithium ion, positively charged because
it is missing one of its electrons, and a negative lithium ion, negatively
charged because it has an extra electron.
Conservation of electric charge
The total electric charge of an isolated system
remains constant regardless of changes within the system itself. This
law is inherent to all processes known to physics and can be derived in a
local form from gauge invariance of the wave function. The conservation of charge results in the charge-current continuity equation. More generally, the net change in charge density ρ within a volume of integration V is equal to the area integral over the current density J through the closed surface S = ∂V, which is in turn equal to the net current I:
Thus, the conservation of electric charge, as expressed by the continuity equation, gives the result:
The charge transferred between times and is obtained by integrating both sides:
where I is the net outward current through a closed surface and Q is the electric charge contained within the volume defined by the surface.
Sabtu, 08 Februari 2014
What is CURRENT and what is VOLTAGE ?
VOLTAGE
Every atom has its own complement of electrons. In a conductor, some of those electrons
can jump from atom to atom. But electrons don't move from atom to atom without a reason.
When electrons are flowing there is always an electrical force pushing them along.
We refer to this force as "Voltage".
Voltage, also called electromotive force, is the potential difference in
"charge" between two points in an electrical field. In other words,
voltage is the "energy per unit charge”.
We define voltage as the amount of potential energy between two points
on a circuit. One point has more charge than another. This difference in
charge between the two points is called voltage. It is measured in
volts, which, technically, is the potential energy difference between
two points that will impart one joule of energy per coulomb of charge
that passes through it (don’t panic if this makes no sense, all will be
explained). The unit “volt” is named after the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta
who invented what is considered the first chemical battery. Voltage is
represented in equations and schematics by the letter “V”.
CURRENT
Current is the rate at which electric charge flows past a point in a
circuit. In other words, current is the rate of flow of electric charge.
This picture illustrates a single cell pocket flashlight. The 1.5 Volt cell is
pushing the electrons through the bulb and the wire. Without this push, the
electrons would be happy to remain stationary. In this case, chemical action
within the battery causes the push. When the battery gets old, its chemical reaction
slows down and its internal push gets weaker and weaker. (That's why the bulb gets dim.)
http://www.reprise.com/host/electricity/voltage.asp
Who Does the Work?
Current, not Voltage, does the work in electrical circuits. The flow of water through a turbine is what makes the turbine spin. The flow of current through an electrical circuit is what lights the bulb, heats the stove, runs the motor, etc. Routing and controlling the flow of current is the goal of every electrical circuit.
A detailed comparison between current and voltage as on Diffen.com:
|
Current
|
Voltage
|
Definition |
Current is the rate at which electric charge flows past a point in a
circuit. In other words, current is the rate of flow of electric charge. |
Voltage, also called electromotive force, is the potential difference
in charge between two points in an electrical field. In other words,
voltage is the "energy per unit charge”. |
Symbol |
I |
V |
Unit |
A or amps or ampere |
V or volts or voltage |
SI Unit |
1 ampere =1 coulomb/second. |
1 volt = 1 joule/coulomb. |
Measuring Instrument |
Ammeter |
Voltmeter |
Relationship |
Current is the effect (voltage being the cause). Current cannot flow without Voltage. |
Voltage is the cause and current is its effect. Voltage can exist without current. |
Field created |
A magnetic field |
An electrostatic field |
In series connection |
Current is the same through all components connected in series. |
Voltage gets distributed over components connected in series. |
In a parallel connection |
Current gets distributed over components connected in parallel. |
Voltages are the same across all components connected in parallel. |
Rabu, 15 Januari 2014
What is Electronics?
Device or technology associated with or employing low voltage current and solid state integrated circuits or components, usually for transmission and/or processing of analog or digital data.
(http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/electronic.html#ixzz2qV792qMo)
Electronics means study of flow of electrons in electrical circuits. The word Electronics comes from electron mechanics which means learning the way how an electron behaves under different conditions of externally applied fields.
(http://nehasadana.expertscolumn.com/article/what-electronics-introduction-electronics-applications-and-electronics-components)
The concept electronics is used for electronic components, integrated circuits, and electrical systems. Main areas of usage are modern information technology and telecommunications, tools for recording and playing sound and picture, sensors and steering systems, instrumentation and measurement devices.
(http://www.ntnu.edu/studies/mtel/what-is-electronics)
Electronics is the branch of science that deals with the study of flow and control of electrons (electricity) and the study of their behavior and effects in vacuums, gases, and semiconductors, and with devices using such electrons. This control of electrons is accomplished by devices that resist, carry, select, steer, switch, store, manipulate, and exploit the electron.
(http://www.electronicsandyou.com/electronics-basics/electronics_definitions.html)
So we can conclude that ELECTRONIC is ART, SCIENCE , and TECHNOLOGY THAT DEALS WITH MANAGEMENT OF ELECTRONS FLOWING IN ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT SYSTEM AT LOW VOLTAGE CURRENT COMPRISES COMPONENTS.
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