I Grounding Process: Neutralizing Negatively Charged Objects

AI Thread Summary
Grounding a negatively charged object involves transferring excess negative charges to the ground, which is often considered an infinite reservoir. The body acts as a conduit for this charge transfer, but whether it becomes negatively charged depends on the Earth's overall charge state. If the Earth is already positively charged, a small amount of electrons transferred would not significantly alter its charge. The total charge on Earth is generally considered constant, with some debate about its neutrality; however, discharging an object does slightly increase the Earth's negative charge. This process illustrates the balance of electrical potential between charged objects and their surroundings.
Aya Elsayed
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Let us consider a negatively charged object. We want to neutralize this object, so we touched it by our hands to remove the excess of negative charges by Grounding. Now the question is : Will our body (The Ground) be negatively charged as it gained those negative charges? then why it is called infinite reservoir?
 
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You might consider an analogy of a bottle of compressed air. If you open the bottle, air escapes into the atmosphere until the pressure inside and out is "atmospheric pressure". The atmosphere could be considered the "infinite reservoir " here.

If you were inside a sealed container - say a submarine - when you did this, you'd find the same: air would escape until the pressure inside and outside the bottle was equal to the submarine's internal air pressue.

In either case the flow of air would increase the pressure outside by a tiny amount. For the world atmosphere I think this would be negligible. For the submarine, perhaps it were a very large tank (rather than the pop bottle or beer can I'd thought about) maybe the pressure change would be detectable?

You are correct that your charge goes somewhere, and it changes the potential of the "sink" : just as the object is not completely discharged (in general) but brought to the same potential as the sink.

Whether the ground becomes negatively charged by discharging your object, would depend on it's original state of charge. If the Earth were already charged with positive* megacoulombs, then a few picocoulombs of electrons would not make it become negative.

Edit: on looking into the charge on the Earth, I can't find anything on which 97% of scientists agree, but more seem to say our charge is negative. The magnitude maybe of the order of 0.6 MCb.
 
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Thank you so much! This helped a lot :)
 
Aya Elsayed said:
Let us consider a negatively charged object. We want to neutralize this object, so we touched it by our hands to remove the excess of negative charges by Grounding. Now the question is : Will our body (The Ground) be negatively charged as it gained those negative charges? then why it is called infinite reservoir?
Total charge of everything on Earth is constant. It's usually thought of as zero but I suppose that can be debated. So when you discharge your object the charge on Earth and everything else on/in it does indeed go slightly more negative
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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