University Physics Volume 2
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168161
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 7, Problem 7.4CYU
Check Your Understanding How much energy does a 1.5-V AAA battery have that can move 100C ?
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Construct Your Own Problem. Consider a battery used to supply energy to a cellular phone. Construct a problem in which you determine the energy that must be supplied by the battery, and then calculate the amount of charge it must be able to move in order to supply this energy. Among the things to be considered are the energy needs and battery voltage. You may need to look ahead to interpret manufacturer’s battery ratings in ampere-hours as energy in joules.
A camera requires 5.0 J of energy for a flash lasting 1.0 ms.(a)What power does the flashtube use while it’s flashing?(b)If the flashtube operates at 200 V, what size capacitor is neededto supply the flash energy?(c)If the flashtube is fired once every 10 s, what’s its average powerconsumption?
In the figure £₁ = 4.03 V, 2 = 0.838 V, R₁ = 5.400, R₂ = 1.660, R3 = 5.39
Q, and both batteries are ideal. What is the rate at which energy is
dissipated in (a) R₁. (b) R2, and (c) R3? What is the power of (d) battery 1
and (e) battery 2?
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Chapter 7 Solutions
University Physics Volume 2
Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding If Q has a mass of 4.00 g...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding What is the potential...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding Is the electrical...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding How much energy does a...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding How many electrons would...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding How would this example...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding From the examples, how...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding What is the potential...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding What is the potential on...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding What is the potential on...
Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding Which coordinate system...Ch. 7 - Check Your Understanding What are the...Ch. 7 - Would electric potential energy be meaningful if...Ch. 7 - Why do we need to be careful about work done on...Ch. 7 - Does the order in which we assemble a system of...Ch. 7 - Discuss how potential difference and electric...Ch. 7 - What is die strength of the electric field in a...Ch. 7 - If a proton is released from rest in an electric...Ch. 7 - Voltage is the common word for potential...Ch. 7 - If the voltage between two points is zero can a...Ch. 7 - Wliat is the relationship between voltage and...Ch. 7 - Voltages are always measured between two points...Ch. 7 - How are units of volts and electron-volts related?...Ch. 7 - Can a particle move in a direction of increasing...Ch. 7 - Compare the electric dipole moments of charges +Q...Ch. 7 - Would Gauss’s law be helpful for determining the...Ch. 7 - In what region of space is the potential due to a...Ch. 7 - Can the potential of a nonuniformly charged sphere...Ch. 7 - If the electric field is zero throughout a region,...Ch. 7 - Explain why knowledge of E(x, y, z) is not...Ch. 7 - If two points are at the same potential, are there...Ch. 7 - Suppose you have a map of equipotential surfaces...Ch. 7 - Is the electric potential necessarily constant...Ch. 7 - Linder electrostatic conditions, the excess charge...Ch. 7 - - Can a positively charged conductor be at a...Ch. 7 - Can equipotential surfaces intersect?Ch. 7 - Why are the metal support rods for satellite...Ch. 7 - (a) Why are fish reasonably safe in an electrical...Ch. 7 - What are the similarities and differences between...Ch. 7 - About what magnitude of potential is used to...Ch. 7 - Consider a charge Q1(1+5.0C) fixed at a site with...Ch. 7 - Two charges Q1(1+2.00C) and Q2(+2.00C are placed...Ch. 7 - To form a hydrogen atom, a proton is fixed at a...Ch. 7 - (a) What is the average power output of a heart...Ch. 7 - Find the ratio of speeds of an electron and a...Ch. 7 - An evacuated tube uses an accelerating voltage of...Ch. 7 - Show that units of V/m and N/C for electric field...Ch. 7 - What is the strength of the electric field between...Ch. 7 - The electric field strength between two parallel...Ch. 7 - The voltage across a membrane forming a cell wall...Ch. 7 - Two parallel conducting plates are separated by...Ch. 7 - Find the maximum potential difference between two...Ch. 7 - An electron is to be accelerated in a uniform...Ch. 7 - Use die definition of potential difference in...Ch. 7 - The electric field in a region is pointed away...Ch. 7 - Singly charged gas ions are accelerated from rest...Ch. 7 - A 0.500-cm-diameter plastic sphere, used in a...Ch. 7 - How far from a 1.00C point charge is the potential...Ch. 7 - If the potential due to a point charge is 5.00102...Ch. 7 - In nuclear fission, a nucleus splits roughly in...Ch. 7 - A research Vail de Graaff generator has a 2.00-m-...Ch. 7 - An electrostatic paint sprayer has a...Ch. 7 - (a) What is the potential between two points...Ch. 7 - Find the potential at points P1,P2,andP4 in the...Ch. 7 - Two charges 20Cand+2.0C are separated by 4.0 cm on...Ch. 7 - (a) Plot the potential of a uniformly charged 1-m...Ch. 7 - Throughout a region, equipotential surfaces are...Ch. 7 - In a particular region, the electric potential is...Ch. 7 - Calculate the electric field of an infinite line...Ch. 7 - Two very large metal plates are placed 2.0 cm...Ch. 7 - A very large sheet of insulating material has had...Ch. 7 - A metallic sphere of radius 2.0 cm is charged with...Ch. 7 - Two large charged plates of charge density 30C/m2...Ch. 7 - A long cylinder of aluminum of radius R meters is...Ch. 7 - Two parallel plates 10 cm on a side are given...Ch. 7 - The surface charge density on a long straight...Ch. 7 - Concentric conducting spherical shells carry...Ch. 7 - Shown below are two concentric spherical shells of...Ch. 7 - A solid cylindrical conductor of radius a is...Ch. 7 - (a) What is the electric field 5.00 m from die...Ch. 7 - (a) What is the direction and magnitude of an...Ch. 7 - A simple and common technique for accelerating...Ch. 7 - In a Geiger counter, a thin metallic wire at the...Ch. 7 - The practical limit to all electric field in air...Ch. 7 - To form a helium atom, an alpha particle that...Ch. 7 - Find the electrostatic energy of eight equal...Ch. 7 - The probability of fusion occurring is greatly...Ch. 7 - A bare helium nucleus has two positive charges and...Ch. 7 - An election enters a region between two large...Ch. 7 - How far apart are two conducting plates that have...Ch. 7 - (a) Will the electric field strength between two...Ch. 7 - Membrane walls of living cells have surprisingly...Ch. 7 - A double charged ion is accelerated to an energy...Ch. 7 - The temperature near the center of the Sun is...Ch. 7 - A lightning bolt strikes a tree, moving 20.0 C of...Ch. 7 - What is the potential 0.5301010 m from a proton...Ch. 7 - (a) A sphere has a surface uniformly charged with...Ch. 7 - What are the sign and magnitude of a point charge...Ch. 7 - In one of the classic nuclear physics experiments...Ch. 7 - A 12.0-V battery-operated bottle warmer heats 50.0...Ch. 7 - A battery-operated car uses a 12.0-V system. Find...Ch. 7 - (a) Find the voltage near a 10.0 cm diameter metal...Ch. 7 - A uniformly charged ring of radius 10 cm is placed...Ch. 7 - A glass ring of radius 5.0 cm is painted with a...Ch. 7 - A CD disk of radius (R = 3.0 cm) is sprayed with a...Ch. 7 - (a) What is the final speed of an electron...Ch. 7 - A large metal plate is charged uniformly to a...Ch. 7 - Your friend gets really excited by the idea of...Ch. 7 - (a) Find x L limit of the potential of a finite...Ch. 7 - A small spherical pith ball of radius 0.50 cm is...Ch. 7 - Two parallel conducting plates, each of...Ch. 7 - A point charge of q=50108 C is placed at the...Ch. 7 - Earth has a net charge that produces an electric...Ch. 7 - Point charges of 25.0/ C and 45. C are placed...Ch. 7 - What can you say about two charges q1and q2 if the...Ch. 7 - Calculate the angular velocity of an electron...Ch. 7 - An electron has an initial velocity of 5.00106m/s...Ch. 7 - Three Na+ and three Cl ions are placed alternately...Ch. 7 - Look up (presumably online, or by dismantling an...Ch. 7 - Use the electric field of a finite sphere with...Ch. 7 - Calculate the electric field of a dipole...
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- Consider the circuit shown in Figure P26.24, where C1, = 6.00 F, C2 = 3.00 F. and V = 20.0 V. Capacitor C1 is first charged by closing switch S1. Switch S1 is then opened, and the charged capacitor is connected to the uncharged capacitor by closing Calculate (a) the initial charge acquired by C, and (b) the final charge on each capacitor.arrow_forwardConsider the circuit shown in Figure P20.52, where C1 = 6.00 F, C2 = 3.00 F, and V = 20.0 V. Capacitor C1 is first charged by closing switch S1. Switch S1 is then opened, and the charged capacitor is connected to the uncharged capacitor by closing S2. Calculate (a) the initial charge acquired by C1 and (b) the final charge on each capacitor. Figure P20.52arrow_forwardA typical cell phone consumes an average of about 1.00 W of electrical power and operates on 3.80 V. (a) What average current does the phone draw from its battery? (b) Calculate the energy stored in a fully charged battery if the phone requires charging after 5.00 hours of use.arrow_forward
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- Referring to Figure CQ21.4, describe what happens to the light-bulb after the switch is closed. Assume the capacitor has a large capacitance and is initially uncharged. Also assume the light illuminates when connected directly across the battery terminals.arrow_forwardTwo capacitors, C1 = 18.0 F and C2 = 36.0 F, are connected in series, and a 12.0-V battery is connected across the two capacitors. Find (a) the equivalent capacitance and (b) the energy stored in this equivalent capacitance. (c) Find the energy stored in each individual capacitor. (d) Show that the sum of these two energies is the same as the energy found in part (b). (e) Will this equality always be true, or docs it depend on the number of capacitors and their capacitances? (f) If the same capacitors were connected in parallel, what potential difference would be required across them so that the combination stores the same energy as in part (a)? (g) Which capacitor stores more energy in this situation, C1 or C2?arrow_forwardSuppose you have a 9.00-V battery, a 2.00F capacitor, and a 7.40F capacitor, (a) Find the charge and energy stored if the capacitors are connected to the battery in series, (b) Do the same for a parallel connection.arrow_forward
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