Where the energy to move electroscope leaves comes from?

AI Thread Summary
The energy required to spread the leaves of a gold-leaf electroscope during induction comes from the work done by the hand bringing a charged rod near the electroscope. When the charged rod approaches, it creates an electric field that induces charge separation in the electroscope, requiring additional energy to overcome the attraction. This extra energy is supplied by the hand, which must exert more effort compared to when a neutral rod is used. The underlying principle involves electric energy, defined as charge multiplied by voltage. Understanding this energy transfer is crucial for grasping the mechanics of the electroscope's operation.
alikim
Messages
20
Reaction score
0
Physics news on Phys.org
welcome to pf!

hi alikim! welcome to pf! :smile:

the hand (in the picture) has to do more work to bring a charged rod near the plate than if the rod was not charged …

the extra energy is supplied by the hand

(which i assume is attached to a live human :wink:)
 
Thanks heaps! :smile:
 
If the electroscope is uncharged then the rod will be attracted to it and that means it takes less work to move a charged rod near the plate then an uncharged rod.
The energy comes from the electric charge and the voltage. Electric energy is charge times voltage.
 
I was using the Smith chart to determine the input impedance of a transmission line that has a reflection from the load. One can do this if one knows the characteristic impedance Zo, the degree of mismatch of the load ZL and the length of the transmission line in wavelengths. However, my question is: Consider the input impedance of a wave which appears back at the source after reflection from the load and has traveled for some fraction of a wavelength. The impedance of this wave as it...

Similar threads

Replies
6
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
12
Views
17K
Replies
1
Views
5K
Replies
4
Views
3K
Back
Top