Topics
Electric Charges and Fields
- Electric Charge
- Conductors and Insulators
- Basic Properties of Electric Charge
- Coulomb’s Law
- Forces between Multiple Charges
- Electric Field
- Electric Field Due to a System of Charges
- Physical Significance of Electric Field
- Electric Field Lines
- Electric Flux
- Electric Dipole
- Dipole in a Uniform External Field
- Continuous Charge Distribution
- Gauss’s Law
- Application of Gauss' Law
Electrostatics
Current Electricity
Electrostatic Potential and Capacitance
- Electric Potential and Potential Energy
- Electrostatic Potential
- Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge
- Potential Due to an Electric Dipole
- Potential due to a System of Charges
- Equipotential Surfaces
- Relation Between Electric Field and Electrostatic Potential
- Potential Energy of a System of Charges
- Potential Energy of a Single Charge
- Potential Energy of a System of Two Charges in an External Field
- Potential Energy of a Dipole in an External Field
- Electrostatics of Conductors
- Dielectrics and Polarisation
- Capacitors and Capacitance
- The Parallel Plate Capacitor
- Effect of Dielectric on Capacitance
- Combination of Capacitors
- Energy Stored in a Charged Capacitor
- Overview: Electric Potential
- Overview: Capacitors and Dielectrics
Magnetic Effects of Current and Magnetism
Current Electricity
- Electric Current
- Electric Currents in Conductors
- Ohm's Law
- Drift of Electrons and the Origin of Resistivity
- Mobility of Electrons
- Limitations of Ohm’s Law
- Resistivity of Various Materials
- Temperature Dependence of Resistivity
- Electrical Energy and Power in Conductors
- Cells, EMF, and Internal Resistance
- Cells in Series and in Parallel
- Kirchhoff’s Laws
- Wheatstone Bridge
- Overview: Electric Resistance and Ohm's Law
- Overview: DC Circuits and Measurements
Electromagnetic Induction and Alternating Currents
Moving Charges and Magnetism
- Electromagnetism
- Magnetic force
- Motion in a Magnetic Field
- Biot-Savart Law
- Magnetic Field on the Axis of a Circular Current-Carrying Loop
- Ampere’s Circuital Law
- Solenoid
- Force Between Two Parallel Currents (Ampere’s Law)
- Torque on a Rectangular Current Loop in a Uniform Magnetic Field
- Circular Current Loop as a Magnetic Dipole
- Moving Coil Galvanometer
- Overview: Moving Charges and Magnetic Field
- Overview: Torque on a Current-Loop : Moving-Coil Galvanometer
Electromagnetic Waves
Magnetism and Matter
- Concept of Magnetism
- The Bar Magnet
- Magnetic Field Lines
- Bar Magnet as an Equivalent Solenoid
- The Dipole in a Uniform Magnetic Field
- The Electrostatic Analog
- Magnetism and Gauss’s Law
- Magnetisation and Magnetic Intensity
- Magnetic Properties of Materials
- Overview: Magnetism and Mater
Electromagnetic Induction
Optics
Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
Alternating Current
- AC Voltage Applied to a Resistor
- Representation of AC Current and Voltage by Rotating Vectors - Phasors
- AC Voltage Applied to an Inductor
- AC Voltage Applied to a Capacitor
- AC Voltage Applied to a Series LCR Circuit
- Phasor-diagram Solution
- Resonance
- Power in AC Circuit
- Transformers
- Overview: AC Circuits
Atoms and Nuclei
Electromagnetic Waves
- Concept of Electromagnetic Waves
- Displacement Current
- Sources of Electromagnetic Waves
- Nature of Electromagnetic Waves
- Electromagnetic Spectrum
- Overview of Electromagnetic Waves
Electronic Devices
Ray Optics and Optical Instruments
- Ray Optics Or Geometrical Optics
- Reflection of Light by Spherical Mirrors
- Sign Convention for Reflection by Spherical Mirrors
- Focal Length of Spherical Mirrors
- Mirror Equation of Spherical Mirrors
- Refraction of Light
- Total Internal Reflection
- Applications of Total Internal Reflection
- Refraction at a Spherical Surfaces
- Refraction by a Lens
- Power of a Lens
- Combined Focal Length of Two Thin Lenses in Contact
- Refraction of Light Through a Prism
- Optical Instruments
- Microscope and it’s types
- Telescope
- Overview of Ray Optics and Optical Instruments
Wave Optics
- Concept of Wave Optics
- Huygens Principle
- Refraction of a Plane Wave
- Refraction at a Rarer Medium
- Reflection of a Plane Wave by a Plane Surface
- Coherent and Incoherent Addition of Waves
- Interference of Light Waves and Young’s Experiment
- Diffraction of Light
- The Single Slit
- Seeing the Single Slit Diffraction Pattern
- Polarisation of Light
- Overview: Wave Optics
Communication Systems
The Special Theory of Relativity
Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
- Dual Nature of Radiation
- Electron Emission
- Photoelectric Effect - Hertz’s Observations
- Photoelectric Effect - Hallwachs’ and Lenard’s Observations
- Experimental Study of Photoelectric Effect
- Effects of Intensity and Frequency on Photocurrent
- Photoelectric Effect and Wave Theory of Light
- Einstein’s Photoelectric Equation: Energy Quantum of Radiation
- Particle Nature of Light: The Photon
- Wave Nature of Matter
- Overview: Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
Atoms
Nuclei
- Atomic Masses and Composition of Nucleus
- Size of the Nucleus
- Mass - Energy
- Nuclear Binding Energy
- Nuclear Force
- Radioactivity
- Forms of Energy > Nuclear Energy
- Nuclear Fission
- Nuclear Fusion
- Controlled Thermonuclear Fusion
- Overview: Nuclei
Semiconductor Electronics - Materials, Devices and Simple Circuits
- Concept of Semiconductor Electronics
- Classification of Metals, Conductors and Semiconductors
- Intrinsic Semiconductor
- Extrinsic Semiconductor
- n-type Semiconductor
- p-type Semiconductor
- Diode or p-n Junction
- Semiconductor Diode
- Application of Junction Diode as a Rectifier
- Overview: Semiconductor Electronics
Communication Systems
- Detection of Amplitude Modulated Wave
- Production of Amplitude Modulated Wave
- Basic Terminology Used in Electronic Communication Systems
- Sinusoidal Waves
- Modulation and Its Necessity
- Amplitude Modulation (AM)
- Need for Modulation and Demodulation
- Satellite Communication
- Propagation of EM Waves
- Bandwidth of Transmission Medium
- Bandwidth of Signals
The Special Theory of Relativity
- The Special Theory of Relativity
- The Principle of Relativity
- Maxwell'S Laws
- Kinematical Consequences
- Dynamics at Large Velocity
- Energy and Momentum
- The Ultimate Speed
- Twin Paradox
Estimated time: 29 minutes
CBSE: Class 12
Introduction to Coulomb's Law
- The electric interaction between two charged bodies can be expressed in terms of the forces they exert on each other.
- Coulomb (1736–1806) made the first quantitative investigation of the force between electric charges, using point charges at rest.
- A point charge is a charge whose dimensions are negligibly small compared to its distance from other bodies.
- Coulomb's Law is a fundamental law governing the interaction between stationary charges.
CISCE: Class 12
Definition: Electric Force
The force of attraction or repulsion acting between two electric charges is called the electric force.
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11
Definition: Relative Permittivity (Dielectric Constant)
The ratio of the force between two point charges placed at a certain distance apart in free space or vacuum to the force between the same two point charges when placed at the same distance in the given medium is called relative permittivity (K) or dielectric constant.
CBSE: Class 12
Statement of Coulomb's Law
- When the linear size of charged bodies is much smaller than the distance separating them, they are treated as point charges.
- Coulomb found that the force between two point charges varied inversely as the square of the distance between them.
- The force was directly proportional to the product of the magnitudes of the two charges.
- The force acted along the line joining the two charges.
- For two point charges q1 and q2 separated by a distance r in vacuum, the magnitude of the force is given by:
F = k\[\frac {∣q_1q_2∣}{r^2}\] ...(1)
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11
Maharashtra State Board: Class 11
Law: Coulomb's Law
The force of attraction or repulsion between two point charges at rest is directly proportional to the product of the magnitude of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
Scalar Form:
F = \[\frac{1}{4\pi K\varepsilon_0}\cdot\frac{q_1q_2}{r^2}\]
Vector Form:
\[\vec F_{12}\] = \[\frac{1}{4\pi K\varepsilon_{0}}\cdot\frac{q_{1}q_{2}}{r_{12}^{2}}\hat{r}_{12}\]
where q1 and q2 are charges separated by distance r, and \[\hat r_{12}\] is the unit vector from q1 to q2.
CBSE: Class 12
About Charles Augustin de Coulomb
- Coulomb was a French physicist who began his career as a military engineer in the West Indies.
- In 1776, he returned to Paris and retired to a small estate to pursue scientific research.
- He invented a torsion balance to measure the quantity of a force and used it to determine forces of electric attraction or repulsion between small charged spheres.
- In 1785, he arrived at the inverse square law, now known as Coulomb's Law.
- The law had been anticipated by Priestley and also by Cavendish, though Cavendish never published his results.
- Coulomb also found the inverse square law of force between unlike and like magnetic poles.
CBSE: Class 12
Experimental Verification of Coulomb’s Law
- Coulomb used a torsion balance to measure the force between two charged metallic spheres.
- When the separation between two spheres is much larger than their radius, the spheres may be regarded as point charges.
- To vary the charge in a controlled way, Coulomb touched a charged metallic sphere (charge q) with an identical uncharged sphere — by symmetry, the charge on each became q/2.
- Repeating this process gave charges of q/2, q/4, and so on.
- He varied the distance for a fixed pair of charges and measured the force for different separations.
- He then varied the charges in pairs, keeping the distance fixed, and compared forces for different pairs at different distances.
- Through this method, Coulomb arrived at the relation in Eq. (1).
- While originally established at a macroscopic scale, the law has also been confirmed down to the subatomic level (r ∼ 10−10 m).
CBSE: Class 12
The Constant k and the Unit of Charge
- In Eq. (1), k is an arbitrary positive constant whose choice determines the size of the unit of charge.
- In SI units, the value of k is approximately 9 × 109 Nm2C−2.
- For q1 = q2 = 1 C and r = 1 m, the force works out to F = 9 × 109 N.
- Therefore, 1 coulomb is the charge that, when placed 1 m from another charge of the same magnitude in vacuum, experiences a repulsive force of 9 × 109 N.
- One coulomb is too large a unit for practical use; in electrostatics, smaller units like 1 mC or 1 μC are used instead.
- The constant k is written as k = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] for later convenience, giving:
F = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] ⋅ \[\frac {∣q_1q_2∣}{r^2}\] ...(2) - ε0 is called the permittivity of free space, with a value of ε0 = 8.854 × 10−12 C2N−1m−2
CBSE: Class 12
Law: Vector Form of Coulomb's Law
- Since force is a vector, Coulomb's Law is better expressed in vector notation.
- The vector leading from charge 1 to charge 2 is r21 = r2 − r1, and from charge 2 to charge 1 is r12 = r1 − r2 = −r21.
- The corresponding unit vectors are \[\hat r_{21}\] = \[\frac {r_{21}}{r_{21}}\] and \[\hat r_{12}\] = \[\frac {r_{12}}{r_{12}}\], with \[\hat r_{21}\] =−\[\hat r_{12}\].
- The vector form of Coulomb's Law is:
F21 = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] ⋅ \[\frac {q_1q_2}{r^2_{21}}\]\[\hat r_{21}\] ...(3) - If q1 and q2 are of the same sign, F21 is along \[\hat r_{21}\], representing repulsion.
- If q1 and q2 are of opposite signs, F21 is along −\[\hat r_{21}\], representing attraction.
- Eq. (3) handles both like and unlike charges correctly within a single equation — no separate formulas are needed.
- The force F12 on q1 due to q2 is obtained by interchanging 1 and 2: F12 = −F21, confirming agreement with Newton's Third Law.
- Eq. (3) gives the force in vacuum; when charges are placed in matter, the situation becomes more complex due to the charged constituents of the medium.
CBSE: Class 12
Example 1
- Both Coulomb's Law and Newton's Law of Gravitation have an inverse-square dependence on the distance between charges/masses, respectively.
- The electric force between an electron and a proton at distance r is Fe = −\[\frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\cdot\frac{e^2}{r^2}\], where the negative sign indicates attraction.
- The gravitational force between them is FG = −G\[\frac{m_pm_e}{r^2}\], which is also always attractive.
- The ratio of their magnitudes for an electron–proton pair is ∣\[\frac {F_e}{F_G}\]∣ = \[\frac {e^2}{4πε_0Gm_pm_e}\] = 2.4 × 1039.
- For two protons, the ratio is ∣\[\frac {F_e}{F_G}\]∣ = \[\frac {e^2}{4πε_0Gm_p^2}\] = 1.3 × 1036.
- For two protons inside a nucleus (r ∼ 10−15 m), the electric force is Fe ∼ 230 N while the gravitational force is only FG ∼ 1.9 × 10−34 N.
- These values show that electrical forces are enormously stronger than gravitational forces.
- The magnitude of the electric force between an electron and a proton at r = 1 Å is ∣F∣ = 2.3 × 10−8 N.
- The resulting acceleration of the electron is ae = 2.5 × 1022 m/s2, and that of the proton is ap = 1.4 × 1019 m/s2.
- These enormous values confirm that the effect of the gravitational field is negligible on the motion of the electron under the Coulomb force.
CBSE: Class 12
Example 2
- Sphere A carries charge q and sphere B carries charge q′, separated by r = 10 cm; the initial electrostatic force between them is F = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] ⋅ \[\frac {qq′}{r^2}\].
- When identical uncharged sphere C touches A, the charge redistributes equally, leaving each with q/2 by symmetry.
- When identical uncharged sphere D touches B, the redistributed charge on each is q′/2.
- When B is brought closer to A such that the new separation is r/2 = 5 cm, the new force is:
F′ = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] ⋅ \[\frac{(q/2)(q^\prime/2)}{(r/2)^2}=\frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\cdot\frac{qq^\prime}{r^2}\] = F - The electrostatic force on A due to B remains exactly unchanged — halving the charges and halving the distance perfectly cancel each other out.
