Electricity and Charge: Understanding Attraction and Earthed Conductors

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the effects of an insulator and earthing on charge distribution in conductors. When an insulator is in place, positive charges attract negative charges in the conductor, leading to an uneven charge distribution. Earthing allows the conductor to gain a negative charge due to this attraction, but once the Earth connection is removed and the insulator is taken away, the negative charge redistributes evenly. The participants clarify that earthing and removing the insulator have different implications for charge behavior. Understanding these concepts is crucial for grasping the dynamics of electricity and charge interactions.
Cici2017

Homework Statement



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Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I chose B because I thought the positive charges in the insulator would attract the negative charges in the conductor to one side. I do realize that it is earthed for a short time. What difference does it make?

Thank you
 
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What happens when "the insulator is removed"?
 
mjc123 said:
What happens when "the insulator is removed"?
The negative charges redistribute themselves evenly around the conductor?
 
Yes
 
mjc123 said:
Yes
Oh~so 'earthing' has the same effect as removing the insulator?
 
No. Earthing allows the (previously isolated) conductor to acquire a negative charge as a result of attraction from the positively charged insulator. Then the Earth is disconnected (the question doesn't say this explicitly, but it is implied in "earthed for a short time") and then the insulator is removed, and the negative charge is redistributed.
 
mjc123 said:
No. Earthing allows the (previously isolated) conductor to acquire a negative charge as a result of attraction from the positively charged insulator. Then the Earth is disconnected (the question doesn't say this explicitly, but it is implied in "earthed for a short time") and then the insulator is removed, and the negative charge is redistributed.
okay, so if the insulator was not removed, the answer would have been B?
 
Yes
 
mjc123 said:
Yes
Thank you so much!
 
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