Go back
Anyone a Master of Physics?

Anyone a Master of Physics?

Posers and Puzzles

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Ramned
Ok, good. But what leads to the balloon falling: where does the charge go?
If you touch the balloon you're body will act as a ground, I think that's how you say it in english, and the electrons will flow to to you making the attraction weaker weaker till the ballon falls off.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Ramned
Ok, good. But what leads to the balloon falling: where does the charge go?
The charge leaks into the atmosphere because of moisture in the air.

Vote Up
Vote Down

They leak into the wall and the wall is earthed, so they leak back into the earth.?

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Ramned
Electric Forces

[b]15. A balloon negatively charged by rubbing clings to a wall. (A) Is the wall positive charged or does it have a negative charge? (B) Why does the balloon eventually fall?
[/b]
The wall has an induced positive charge because the negative charge in the balloon pushed away electrons in the wall. Eventually the electrons all move from the balloon into the wall and/or atmosphere and it loses it's charge.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
The wall has an induced positive charge because the negative charge in the balloon pushed away electrons in the wall. Eventually the electrons all move from the balloon into the wall and/or atmosphere and it loses it's charge.
This reflects my intuition on the problem.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Both objects here are insulators, which means that any induced charge on them will be immobile and localized (compare this to a conductor, where an induced charge is mobile and spread out over the whole object). The wall itself should be neutral, with small sections of weakly positive and negative charges dotted on its surface.

When you put the negatively charged balloon to the wall, the small regions of weak positive charge on the wall attract it but the electrons aren't able to jump the gap quickly enough to equalize the charges and the balloon stays put. Eventually, the charges will jump the gap in sufficient quantity that the moment of the balloon will overcome the attraction and the balloon falls off the wall.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Ramned
You are correct. A rise in temperature will increase the dimensions of the wind instrument much less than it increases the speed of sound in the enclosed air. This effect will raise the resonant frequencies => sharp as temp increases, flat as it decreases.

Next question to follow. Good job. HolyT you have it the same - I misread "tune it lower."
Neat. Just interesting to note that guitars get sharper in cold weather because the strings contract, an effect which is not counterbalanced by the drop in air temperature.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Ramned
Ok, I see where you all are going. Don't worry about actually tuning it now. When you increase temperature does the pitch get A) flatter, or B) sharper? Why?
I don't even know what that means.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
I don't even know what that means.
flatter - like apancake

sharper - like a lemon

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by adam warlock
If you touch the balloon you're body will act as a ground, I think that's how you say it in english, and the electrons will flow to to you making the attraction weaker weaker till the ballon falls off.
That's right

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
I don't even know what that means.
sharp - pitch up. higher frequency
Flat is just the opposite.

1 edit
Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
The wall has an induced positive charge because the negative charge in the balloon pushed away electrons in the wall. Eventually the electrons all move from the balloon into the wall and/or atmosphere and it loses it's charge.
yes.
I will put up the next question later.

Vote Up
Vote Down

How does the balloon get the excess negative charge to begin with? Thanks.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by HolyT
How does the balloon get the excess negative charge to begin with? Thanks.
This is what's going on. The balloon induces a charge of opposite sign int the wall, causing the balloon and wall to be attracted to each other. The balloon eventually falls because its charge slowly diminishes as it leaks to the ground. (Some of the balloon's charge also could be lost due to positive ions in the surrounding atmosphere, wich would tend to neutralize the enegative charges on the balloon caused by the wall.)

Ok. 16 to follow.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Electrical Energy / Capacitance

16. Suppose scientists had chosen to measure small energies in proton volts rather than electron volts. What difference would this make and why?

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.