Creative ideas for electrostatics demos/labs

AI Thread Summary
Creative demonstrations for electrostatics can effectively illustrate concepts like the zero electric field inside a conductor and the relationship between electric field strength and curvature. A suggested method involves using a copper wire mesh ball with foil-leaf electroscopes attached, electrified by a Van de Graaff generator. Another effective setup includes an insulated copper foil with a small electroscope connected, showing the electric field's behavior as a half-sphere copper net is used to cover the electroscope. These experiments can be conducted with basic materials, making them accessible for educational purposes. Engaging demonstrations enhance understanding of electrostatic principles in an E&M class.
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I am trying to put together some demonstrations for E&M class related to the topic of conductors in electric field, particulary that the field inside is zero (something like Faraday cage) and that the field gets stronger with curvature. I have seen videos of the courses with some great demonstrations, but I do not have enough equipment to reproduce them in our lab. One thing we do NOT have is a decent electroscope to measure (or at least compare) the charge. We have some foil-leaf ones but you can't observe much of an effect on them. We do have a VandeGraaf generator. Does anybody know of any experiments that could be set up with some basic materials?
Thanks!
 
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At what level of education you want to make those demos?

As for your Faraday's cage - what I used to demonstrate at high-school was a ball made of net of thin copper wires, with multiple foil-leaf electroscopes attached inside and outside, then electrised with tabletop van-de-Graaf (disk electrostatic machine may be probably used as well)

Other demo I did was:
insulated copper foil laying on the table, small electroscope standing in the middle (connected to the foil with a wire, electrised. Electroscope shows the field.
Half-sphere made of copper net, connected with a wire to the foil and electroscope, mounted on an insulating long plastic rod. As you slowly cover the electroscope with the Faraday's cover - the electroscope shows vanishing field.
 
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