Charge Conservation: A+2 & B+7 → A+5 & B+5

In summary, when two conductors approach each other, the charges will equilise until there is an odd number of electrons and even number of protons in the system. At that point, the charge on each conductor will be determined by thermal noise.
  • #1
Ed Quanta
297
0
Now suppose we have two conductors A and B. A has a charge of +2 and B has a charge of +8. If we let the two conductors touch and then separate them, each will have a charge of +5. This is because charge is conserved and will flow between the two conductors until each have equal charges.

Ok, so how would this change if instead of B having a charge of +8, it had an initial charge of +7. Now if let the conductors touch and separate them, each of them cannot have a charge of +4.5 because charge is quantized and there is no such thing as half of an electron. So what would happen? What would be the charge on each conductor?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
When you say a charge of do you mean in units of e?

This is confusing. If you are talking in units of e then you describing basically two nuclei of Z=2 and 8 "touching". This is nothing like touching 2 macroscopic objects of some charge.

can you explain a bit more what you mean?
 
  • #3
Wait, sorry do you mean a macroscopic conductor with net charge of +2e and +8e
 
  • #4
Yeah
 
  • #5
Well, the net charge for A and B in isolation would be +8e and +7e. This is the sum over ALL the charges of the system where all the positive nuclei are canceled by all but 8 and 7 electrons.

So you are not dealing with an 8e and 7e system, you have to take into account all the electrons.

When A and B approach in the first case as you say, the electrons will equilise the charge on each body. In the second case where there is an odd number of electrons and and even number of protons for the whole system (A+B) then the charge distribution of A and B will shift to accommodate the charge imbalance.
 
  • #6
There would be a charge of 4 electrons on one and a charge of 5 on the other. Assuming that your spheres were absolutely perfect identical spheres then there would be a 50/50 chance of each having the "extra" charge. It would be determined simply by thermal noise.
 

1. What is charge conservation?

Charge conservation is a fundamental principle in physics that states that the total electric charge in a closed system is constant. This means that the amount of positive charge must always equal the amount of negative charge.

2. What does the equation "A+2 & B+7 → A+5 & B+5" mean?

This equation represents a chemical reaction where element A gains two positive charges and element B gains seven positive charges, while at the same time element A gains five positive charges and element B gains five positive charges. This is known as a redox reaction, where there is a transfer of electrons between atoms.

3. How does charge conservation apply to this equation?

Charge conservation applies to this equation because the total charge on both sides of the reaction must be equal. In this case, the total positive charge on the left side is 9 (2+7) and the total positive charge on the right side is also 9 (5+5).

4. Why is charge conservation important?

Charge conservation is important because it is a fundamental law of nature that helps explain many physical and chemical processes. Without charge conservation, there would be no way to predict or understand how charges behave and interact with each other.

5. What are some real-world examples of charge conservation?

One example of charge conservation is the flow of electric current in a circuit. The total amount of charge entering the circuit must equal the total amount of charge exiting the circuit. Another example is in nuclear reactions, where the total charge of the particles involved must remain constant.

Similar threads

Replies
8
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
4
Views
965
Replies
11
Views
847
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
14
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
11
Views
901
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
15
Views
903
  • Electromagnetism
2
Replies
36
Views
3K
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
1
Views
551
Back
Top