Rubbing Moves Electrons Between Objects
Rubbing moves electrons from hair → balloon. Hair becomes positive; balloon becomes negative.
Which Object Becomes Negatively Charged?
When you rub a balloon on your hair, which becomes negative?
- A) Your hair
- B) The balloon
- C) Both become negative
- D) Neither — they stay neutral
Think: which particle moved, and which direction?
Rubbing Check — Balloon Gains Electrons
B) The balloon
- Electrons move from hair → balloon during rubbing
- Balloon gains electrons → becomes negatively charged
- Hair loses electrons → becomes positively charged
- The moving particle: electrons (protons never leave the nucleus)
Charge Cannot Be Created or Destroyed
- Charge cannot be created or destroyed — only transferred
- Total charge of an isolated system stays constant
- This is a fundamental conservation law — like conservation of energy
Worked Example: Two Conducting Spheres Touch
- Sphere A:
nC · Sphere B: nC → they touch, then separate
Step 1: Total charge before contact:
Step 2: Charge distributes equally (same size spheres):
Conservation Check: What Is the Other Charge?
Two neutral objects are rubbed together. One ends up with
What is the charge on the other object?
Use conservation of charge — total must stay the same.
Conductors Have Mobile, Free Electrons
-
Conductors (metals, salt water): free electrons move through the material
- Charge distributes across the whole surface
- Examples: copper, aluminum, iron
-
Insulators (rubber, glass, plastic): electrons are tightly bound — they don't flow
- Charge stays where it's placed; examples: rubber, glass, dry wood
Conductors and Insulators in Real Life
- Electricians wear rubber gloves — insulator; current can't reach their body
- Copper wire (conductor) inside plastic sheath (insulator)
- Charged rod on metal sphere → charge spreads everywhere
- Charged rod on rubber ball → charge stays at contact point
Semiconductors (silicon): controllable conductivity — basis of transistors
Classify These Five Common Materials
Match each to: Conductor or Insulator
- Copper wire
- Rubber glove
- Salt water
- Dry wood
- Silicon chip
Can electrons move freely through each?
Method 1: Charging by Friction
- Two materials rubbed together — electrons transfer between them
- Direction depends on the materials (triboelectric series)
- Both objects end up charged with opposite signs; total = zero
Example: Balloon on wool — balloon gains electrons (negative); wool loses electrons (positive)
Method 2: Charging by Conduction
Charged object touches neutral conductor → electrons flow → sphere gets same sign as rod
Method 3: Charging by Induction
No contact needed → grounding step → sphere gets opposite sign to rod
Why Induction Produces Opposite Sign
Walk through with a positive rod:
- Rod near sphere → electrons cluster near rod end
- Ground connected → electrons flow in from Earth
- Ground removed → extra electrons trapped
- Rod removed → sphere is negatively charged
The key: grounding lets electrons enter permanently
Conduction vs. Induction at a Glance
| Conduction | Induction | |
|---|---|---|
| Contact required? | Yes | No |
| Result sign | Same as charging object | Opposite to charging object |
| Grounding needed? | No | Yes |
Worked Example: Induction Step by Step
Negative rod near neutral sphere → grounded → ground removed → rod removed.
What sign does the sphere acquire?
- Rod repels electrons → flee to far side
- Ground → electrons leave into Earth
- Ground removed → fewer electrons → positive
- Rod removed → sphere stays positive
Induction Quick Check: Positive Rod
A positive glass rod is held near a neutral metal sphere. Sphere is grounded, ground removed, rod removed.
What is the final charge on the sphere?
A) Positive — same as the rod
B) Negative — opposite to the rod
C) Neutral — charges cancelled
Practice: Identify the Charging Method
-
Rubber rod rubbed with fur becomes negative. Which method? What charge does fur acquire?
-
Charged rod touches neutral sphere; both end up
nC. What was the rod's charge? -
Negative rod charges sphere by induction. What sign does the sphere acquire?
Try all three before continuing.
Practice Answers: All Three Methods
-
Friction. Fur → positive charge; total stays zero.
-
Conduction. Total after =
nC; sphere was nC → rod started at nC. -
Induction. Negative rod → electrons leave → sphere is positive (opposite sign)
Key Takeaways: Charge and Atomic Structure
✓ Two types: positive and negative. Like repels, unlike attracts.
✓ Only electrons move — "positive charge" = electron deficit
✓ Charge is conserved — transferred, never created
Positive charges do not move — electrons do
Rubbing redistributes charge — it doesn't create it
Key Takeaways: Methods of Charging
✓ Conductors: free electrons, charge spreads. Insulators: charge stays local.
✓ Friction: contact, opposite signs on both objects
✓ Conduction: contact, same sign result
✓ Induction: no contact, opposite sign result
Watch out: Induction → opposite sign. Conduction → same sign. Don't mix these up.
Coming Up: Coulomb's Law and Force
Lesson 2 of 5: Coulomb's Law
- Force depends on charge amount and distance
- Electric force vs. gravity — same formula, very different scale
Prepare: review the sign rule and conservation of charge.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Electrical Charges, Conservation of Charge, and Transfer of Charge