Understanding Static Electricity: How Walking on Carpet Creates Voltage

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Walking on carpet can generate thousands of volts of static electricity due to the friction between the carpet and shoes, creating an imbalance of charges. However, the actual energy of the resulting spark is minimal, typically in the range of tens of microjoules, which is harmless. The voltage indicates potential difference, but the energy released during a static discharge is low because only a small number of electrons are involved. The danger from electricity comes primarily from the current (amperage) rather than the voltage itself. Therefore, while one can build up a high voltage, the limited charge means the risk of harm is very low.
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Hi I read that in an encyclopedia but I don't understand it.


"Because the surface of the material is now electrically charged, either negatively or positively, any contact with an uncharged conductive object or with an object having substantially different charge may cause an electrical discharge of the built-up static electricity; a spark. A person simply walking across a carpet may build up a charge of many thousands of volts, enough to cause a spark one centimeter long or more. This type of discharge is usually harmless because the energy ((V2 * C)/2) of the spark is very small, being typically several tens of micro joules in cold dry weather, and much less than that in damp conditions."

THE RED PART iS confusing to me.
How come one can creat thousands of volts by rubbing their feet on a carpet while walking? And if that's true the energy is not small at all... E = (V^2xC)/2... if u have 5000 volts... ?///


PLEASE EXPLAIN ME!
 
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zinedine_88 said:
THE RED PART iS confusing to me.
How come one can creat thousands of volts by rubbing their feet on a carpet while walking? And if that's true the energy is not small at all... E = (V^2xC)/2... if u have 5000 volts... ?///

Hi zinedine!

Think of yourself as a 5,000-volt battery.

An ordinary 1.5-volt battery has exactly 1.5 volts, no matter whether it's fully charged or almost expired. Even when it doesn't have enough power to light a light bulb, the potential difference between its plates is still 1.5 volts.

You are a 5,000-volt battery which is almost expired. You have hardly any charge, but what little charge you do have is 5,000-volts different from the Earth's potential.


To put it another way:
Electric potential is like gravitational potential.

Imagine that a lot of electrons were about to fall on you from a height of 5,000 feet (ignore air resistance).

If there were billions of them, and they fell in a lump, they'd have a huge amount of kinetic energy, and you'd be crushed.

But if only a few electrons fell, they'd have hardly any kinetic energy, and they wouldn't do much harm!

The spark contains electrons "falling" through 5,000 volts. But so few of them fall that the total energy is so small that it does you no harm! :smile:
 
Thanks, I think I got it!

So what kills you in real life is the amount of electrons passing thru ur body, not the voltage. The higher the amperage the more dangerous is ? Am I right
 
Absolutely!
:smile: Your fear of carpets is cured! :smile:
 
tiny-tim said:
You are a 5,000-volt battery which is almost expired. You have hardly any charge, but what little charge you do have is 5,000-volts different from the Earth's potential.

Why you have hardy any charge ? there are so many electrons in your body.
 
GT1 said:
Why you have hardy any charge ? there are so many electrons in your body.

Yes, but theyr'e almost all balanced out by the opposite charge of the protons in your body.

Only the electrons from the carpet have no protons to balance them, and so your charge comes only from them.

And there's very few, so your charge is extremely small. :smile:
 
It may be shown from the equations of electromagnetism, by James Clerk Maxwell in the 1860’s, that the speed of light in the vacuum of free space is related to electric permittivity (ϵ) and magnetic permeability (μ) by the equation: c=1/√( μ ϵ ) . This value is a constant for the vacuum of free space and is independent of the motion of the observer. It was this fact, in part, that led Albert Einstein to Special Relativity.
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