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In the circuit shown in Figure 18.87, bulbs 1 and 2 are identical in mechanical construction (the filaments have the same length and the same cross-sectional area), but the filaments are made of different metals. The electron mobility in the metal used in bulb 2 is three times as large as the electron mobility in the metal used in bulb 1, but both metals have the same number of mobile electrons per cubic meter. The two bulbs are connected in series to two batteries with thick copper wires (like your connecting wires).

(a)In bulb 1, the electron current is i1and the electric field is E1. In terms of these quantities, determine the corresponding quantities i2and E2for bulb 2, and explain your reasoning.

(b)When bulb 2 is replaced by a wire, the electron current through bulb 1 is i0and the electric field in bulb 1 is E0. How big is i1 in terms of i0? Explain your answer, including explicit mention of any approximations you must make. Do not use ohms or series-resistance equations in your explanation, unless you can show in detail how these concepts follow from the microscopic analysis introduced in this chapter.

(c)Explain why the electric field inside the thick copper wires is very small. Also explain why this very small electric field is the same in all of the copper wires, if they all have the same cross-sectional area.

(d)Figure 18.88 is a graph of the magnitude of the electric field at each location around the circuit when bulb 2 is replaced by a wire. Copy this graph and add to it, on the same scale, a graph of the magnitude of the electric field at each location around the circuit when both bulbs are in the circuit. The very small field in the copper wires has been shown much larger than it really is in order to give you room to show how that small field differs in the two circuits.

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) The current in the two bulbs is related as i1= i2 and the field in the two bulbs is related as E2=E13.

Step by step solution

01

Given data

Electron mobility in bulb 2 is related to electron mobility in bulb 1 as

u2 = 3u1 .................(1)

The wires in the two bulbs have the same length, cross sectional area and charge density.

02

Electron current in a circuit

Electron current in a wire of free charge density n , cross sectional area A , mobility u and electric field E is:

i = nAuE .............(2)

03

(a) Comparison of the currents and electric fields in the two bulbs

Since the two bulbs are in series, the current in them are the same, that is,

i1 = i2 .......(3)

Both the bulbs have the same charge density and cross sectional area. Thus, from equation (1), the first bulb has current

i1 = nAu1E .................(4)

and the second bulb has current

i2 = nAu2E .................(5)

Divide equation (5) by equation (iv) and use equations (3) and (1) to get:

i2i1=nAu2E2nAu1E11=3u1E2u1E1E2=E13

Thus, we have i1 = i2 and E2=E13.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

In the circuit shown in Figure 18.91, all of the wire is made of Nichrome, but one segment has a much smaller cross-sectional area. On a copy of this diagram, using the same scale for magnitude that you used in the previous question for Figure 18.90, show the steady-state electric field at the locations indicated, including in the thinner segment. Before attempting to answer these questions, draw a copy of this diagram. All of the locations indicated by letters are inside the wire.

(a)On your diagram, show the electric field at the locations indicated, paying attention to relative magnitude. Use the same scale for magnitude as you did in the previous question.

(b)Carefully draw pluses and minuses on your diagram to show the approximate surface charge distribution that produces the electric field you drew. Make your drawing show clearly the differences between regions of high surface charge density and regions of low surface-charge density. Use your diagram to determine which of the following statements about this circuit are true.

(1) There is a large gradient of surface charge on the wire between locations Cand E. (2) The electron current is the same at every location in this circuit.

(3) Fewer electrons per second pass location Ethan location C.

(4) The magnitude of the electric field at location Gis smaller in this circuit than it

was in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

(5) The magnitude of the electric field is the same at every location in this circuit.

(6) The magnitude of the electric field at location D is larger than the magnitude of the electric field at location G.

(7) There is no surface charge at all on the wire near location G.

(8) The electron current in this circuit is less than the electron current in the previous circuit (Figure 18.90).

Inside a chemical battery it is not actually individual electrons that are transported from the + end to the 鈥 end. At the + end of the battery an 鈥渁cceptor鈥 molecule picks up an electron entering the battery, and at the 鈥 end a different 鈥渄onor鈥 molecule gives up an electron, which leaves the battery. Ions rather than electrons move between the two ends to support the charge inside the battery.

When the supplies of acceptor and donor molecules are used up in a chemical battery, the battery is dead because it can no longer accept or electron. The electron current in electron per second times the number of seconds of battery life, is equal to the number of donor molecules in the battery.

A flashlight battery contains approximately half a mole of donor molecules. The electron current through a thick filament bulb powered by two flashlight batteries in series is about 0.3 A. About how many hours will the batteries keep this bulb lit?

What is the most important general difference between a system in steady state and a system in equilibrium?

Suppose that a wire leads into another, thinner wire of the same material that has only half the cross-sectional area. In the steady state, the number of electrons per second flowing through the thick wire must be equal to the number of electrons per second flowing through the thin wire. If the electric field \({E_1}\) in the thick wire is \(1 \times 1{0^{ - 2}}\;N/C\), what is the electric field \({E_2}\) in the thinner wire?

What is the most important general difference between a system in steady state and a system in equilibrium?

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