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MitsuShai
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Ok, I'm just trying to get this straight in my head. We are going over capacitance in voltage in lab today.
1. The electric field will decrease if charges are taken off the capacitor plates because the electric field depends on the movement of charge in the capacitor. Thus the voltage in the plates will also decrease because voltage is proportional to the electric field. Right?
2. If the capacitance of the circuit fixed then how can the time constant be changed?
Well if you can't change the time constant if the capacitance is fixed.
Formula: V(t)=V(0)e^(-(delta)t/time constant)
3. At t=0 V(t)/V(0)= 1. While decaying, V(t)/V(0) falls and after a while it will be 1/20. If the time constant increased, will the time for V(t)/V(0)=1/20 change and why?
Yes because the formula V(t)=V(0)e^(-(delta)t/time constant) will become delta t= time constant ln(20) and as shown, the time constant and time is proportional. Thus the time will increase when the time constant increases.
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0696.jpg
4. What is the source of emf of the circuit when switch is open?
When the switch is open the capacitor will be discharging and the battery cannot provide a continuous current when the switch is open, so the capacitor provides the source of emf.
5. Express the current through the voltmeter in terms of total current I and the resistances R and Rmeter.
I thought current doesn't flow in a voltmeter but the picture says otherwise and also the next question, so I'm not sure about this, I don't think I should use the junction rule because the current I doesn't have a resistance. The voltage of the meter is the same as the voltage across PQ because its in parallel, so I got this so far:
I meter= (I resistor * R)/R meter I don't know how to find it in terms of just I and instead of I resistor
6. What is current through meter when R meter=R.
I meter=I, since the resistances are the same, they cancel.
7. Did the current get smaller?
No, it got bigger, since the current is free from resistances.
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0698.jpg
8. Find current though meter, using resistance of meter, R small, and current I.
Again like the 5th question, I'm not sure but I got this far: I meter= (I small* R small)/R meter, don't know how to get it in I instead of I small
9. Is the current smaller than in circuit 2?
yes I figured this out mathematically, if a small R is on the numerator and a bigger R in the denominator then I would be smaller than before.
I have no idea what this paragraph is sayaing:
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0701.jpg
This is a pretty amateur explanation but there's still an e there so it should be exponential.
If the that equation that is presented in the paragraph is constant then the time constant should not change, because...I don't know how to explain this using physics
1. The electric field will decrease if charges are taken off the capacitor plates because the electric field depends on the movement of charge in the capacitor. Thus the voltage in the plates will also decrease because voltage is proportional to the electric field. Right?
2. If the capacitance of the circuit fixed then how can the time constant be changed?
Well if you can't change the time constant if the capacitance is fixed.
Formula: V(t)=V(0)e^(-(delta)t/time constant)
3. At t=0 V(t)/V(0)= 1. While decaying, V(t)/V(0) falls and after a while it will be 1/20. If the time constant increased, will the time for V(t)/V(0)=1/20 change and why?
Yes because the formula V(t)=V(0)e^(-(delta)t/time constant) will become delta t= time constant ln(20) and as shown, the time constant and time is proportional. Thus the time will increase when the time constant increases.
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0696.jpg
4. What is the source of emf of the circuit when switch is open?
When the switch is open the capacitor will be discharging and the battery cannot provide a continuous current when the switch is open, so the capacitor provides the source of emf.
5. Express the current through the voltmeter in terms of total current I and the resistances R and Rmeter.
I thought current doesn't flow in a voltmeter but the picture says otherwise and also the next question, so I'm not sure about this, I don't think I should use the junction rule because the current I doesn't have a resistance. The voltage of the meter is the same as the voltage across PQ because its in parallel, so I got this so far:
I meter= (I resistor * R)/R meter I don't know how to find it in terms of just I and instead of I resistor
6. What is current through meter when R meter=R.
I meter=I, since the resistances are the same, they cancel.
7. Did the current get smaller?
No, it got bigger, since the current is free from resistances.
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0698.jpg
8. Find current though meter, using resistance of meter, R small, and current I.
Again like the 5th question, I'm not sure but I got this far: I meter= (I small* R small)/R meter, don't know how to get it in I instead of I small
9. Is the current smaller than in circuit 2?
yes I figured this out mathematically, if a small R is on the numerator and a bigger R in the denominator then I would be smaller than before.
I have no idea what this paragraph is sayaing:
Diagram: http://i324.photobucket.com/albums/k327/ProtoGirlEXE/100_0701.jpg
This is a pretty amateur explanation but there's still an e there so it should be exponential.
If the that equation that is presented in the paragraph is constant then the time constant should not change, because...I don't know how to explain this using physics
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