Will the voltage or potential difference change?

AI Thread Summary
A positively charged rod near a neutral electroscope causes charge redistribution, leading to a net negative charge on the knob while the overall electroscope remains neutral. When sphere A moves closer to sphere B, the electric field intensity at a point to the left of A decreases, despite the distance decreasing, indicating that potential difference is affected by the configuration of charges rather than just distance. The movement of electrons towards the knob results in a negative charge, affecting the electroscope's leaves, which respond to this charge distribution. The discussion highlights that while individual charges may shift, the total charge of the system remains constant. Understanding these principles is crucial for grasping how voltage and electric fields interact in electrostatic scenarios.
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1. A positive charged rod is held near, but does not touch a neutral electroscope. The charge on the knob becomes
1) positive and the leaves become positive 2) positive and the leaves become negative.
3) - and the leaves become + 4) - and the leaves become -.
I chose 1), but it's wrong. I am not really familiar with electroscope and how they work.

2. There are two positive charged spheres, A and B (A is at the left, B is at the right), 3 meters apart. There is a point x left to the A. If sphere A is moved toward sphere B, the electirc field intensity at point x will
1) decrease 2) increase 3) remain the same
I chose 2) since E=V/d, so when d decreases, E increases. But the answer is 1), so I am wondering if the voltage changes as well? so in general, If there is a change in distance between two charges, will the voltage or potential difference change? if not, then what will affect the potential difference?

Thanks.
 
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MIA6 said:
1. A positive charged rod is held near, but does not touch a neutral electroscope. The charge on the knob becomes
1) positive and the leaves become positive 2) positive and the leaves become negative.
3) - and the leaves become + 4) - and the leaves become -.
I chose 1), but it's wrong. I am not really familiar with electroscope and how they work.
What happens to the electrons in the knob when the positive charge is brought close to them?
 


The point x is to the left of sphere A...so how does d between sphere A and point x change as sphere A moves towards sphere B?
 


Hootenanny said:
What happens to the electrons in the knob when the positive charge is brought close to them?

Then there is a redistribution of charge within the object? like the electrons will get to the side where the positive charge is brought to. But then will it stay neutral, and how about the leaves?
 


fizikx said:
The point x is to the left of sphere A...so how does d between sphere A and point x change as sphere A moves towards sphere B?

d between sphere A and point x will also change when A moves toward B because then A is going far away from point x.
 


MIA6 said:
Then there is a redistribution of charge within the object? like the electrons will get to the side where the positive charge is brought to.
Correct :approve:
MIA6 said:
But then will it stay neutral, and how about the leaves?
Overall, the object is still neutral since there is still the same amount of positive and negative charge on the object. However, if some of the electrons move towards the knob as you correctly say, this means that on the knob there will be more [negative] electrons than [positive] lattice ions; hence the knob will have a net negative charge.

Do you follow?
 


Hootenanny said:
Correct :approve:

Overall, the object is still neutral since there is still the same amount of positive and negative charge on the object. However, if some of the electrons move towards the knob as you correctly say, this means that on the knob there will be more [negative] electrons than [positive] lattice ions; hence the knob will have a net negative charge.

Do you follow?

yes, then what about the leaves?
 


MIA6 said:
yes, then what about the leaves?
These electrons the move towards the knob, where do you suppose they come from?
 
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