It was discovered centuries ago
that certain types of materials would mysteriously attract one another after
being rubbed together. For example: after rubbing a piece of silk against a
piece of glass, the silk and glass would tend to stick together. Indeed, there
was an attractive force that could be demonstrated even when the two materials
were separated
Glass and silk aren't the only
materials known to behave like this. Anyone who has ever brushed up against a
latex balloon only to find that it tries to stick to them has experienced this
same phenomenon. Paraffin wax and wool cloth are another pair of materials
early experimenters recognized as manifesting attractive forces after being
rubbed together:
This phenomenon became even more
interesting when it was discovered that identical materials, after having been
rubbed with their respective cloths, always repelled each other:
It was also noted that when a piece
of glass rubbed with silk was exposed to a piece of wax rubbed with wool, the
two materials would attract one another:
Furthermore, it was found that any
material demonstrating properties of attraction or repulsion after being rubbed
could be classed into one of two distinct categories: attracted to glass and
repelled by wax, or repelled by glass and attracted to wax. It was either one
or the other: there were no materials found that would be attracted to or
repelled by both glass and wax, or that reacted to one without reacting to the
other
More attention was directed toward
the pieces of cloth used to do the rubbing. It was discovered that after
rubbing two pieces of glass with two pieces of silk cloth, not only did the
glass pieces repel each other, but so did the cloths. The same phenomenon held
for the pieces of wool used to rub the wax
Now, this was really strange to
witness. After all, none of these objects were visibly altered by the rubbing,
yet they definitely behaved differently than before they were rubbed. Whatever
change took place to make these materials attract or repel one another was
invisible.
Some experimenters speculated that
invisible "fluids" were being transferred from one object to another
during the process of rubbing, and that these "fluids" were able to
effect a physical force over a distance. Charles Dufay was one the early
experimenters who demonstrated that there were definitely two different types
of changes wrought by rubbing certain pairs of objects together. The fact that
there was more than one type of change manifested in these materials was evident
by the fact that there were two types of forces produced: attraction and
repulsion. The hypothetical fluid transfer became known as a charge.
One pioneering researcher, Benjamin
Franklin, came to the conclusion that there was only one fluid exchanged between
rubbed objects, and that the two different "charges" were nothing
more than either an excess or a deficiency of that one fluid. After
experimenting with wax and wool, Franklin suggested that the coarse wool
removed some of this invisible fluid from the smooth wax, causing an excess of
fluid on the wool and a deficiency of fluid on the wax. The resulting disparity
in fluid content between the wool and wax would then cause an attractive force,
as the fluid tried to regain its former balance between the two materials.
Postulating the existence of a
single "fluid" that was either gained or lost through rubbing
accounted best for the observed behavior: that all these materials fell neatly
into one of two categories when rubbed, and most importantly, that the two
active materials rubbed against each other always fell into opposing
categories as evidenced by their invariable attraction to one another. In
other words, there was never a time where two materials rubbed against each
other both became either positive or negative.
Following Franklin's speculation of
the wool rubbing something off of the wax, the type of charge that was
associated with rubbed wax became known as "negative" (because it was
supposed to have a deficiency of fluid) while the type of charge associated
with the rubbing wool became known as "positive" (because it was
supposed to have an excess of fluid). Little did he know that his innocent
conjecture would cause much confusion for students of electricity in the
future!
Precise measurements of electrical
charge were carried out by the French physicist Charles Coulomb in the 1780's
using a device called a torsional balance measuring the force generated
between two electrically charged objects. The results of Coulomb's work led to
the development of a unit of electrical charge named in his honor, the coulomb.
If two "point" objects (hypothetical objects having no appreciable
surface area) were equally charged to a measure of 1 coulomb, and placed 1
meter (approximately 1 yard) apart, they would generate a force of about 9
billion newtons (approximately 2 billion pounds), either attracting or
repelling depending on the types of charges involved.
It discovered much later that this
"fluid" was actually composed of extremely small bits of matter
called electrons, so named in honor of the ancient Greek word for amber:
another material exhibiting charged properties when rubbed with cloth.
Experimentation has since revealed that all objects are composed of extremely
small "building-blocks" known as atoms, and that these atoms
are in turn composed of smaller components known as particles. The three
fundamental particles comprising atoms are called protons, neutrons,
and electrons. Atoms are far too small to be seen, but if we could look
at one, it might appear something like this:
Even though each atom in a piece of
material tends to hold together as a unit, there's actually a lot of empty
space between the electrons and the cluster of protons and neutrons residing in
the middle.
This crude model is that of the
element carbon, with six protons, six neutrons, and six electrons. In any atom,
the protons and neutrons are very tightly bound together, which is an important
quality. The tightly-bound clump of protons and neutrons in the center of the
atom is called the nucleus, and the number of protons in an atom's
nucleus determines its elemental identity: change the number of protons in an
atom's nucleus, and you change the type of atom that it is. In fact, if you
could remove three protons from the nucleus of an atom of lead, you will have
achieved the old alchemists' dream of producing an atom of gold! The tight
binding of protons in the nucleus is responsible for the stable identity of
chemical elements, and the failure of alchemists to achieve their dream.
Neutrons are much less influential
on the chemical character and identity of an atom than protons, although they
are just as hard to add to or remove from the nucleus, being so tightly bound.
If neutrons are added or gained, the atom will still retain the same chemical
identity, but its mass will change slightly and it may acquire strange nuclear
properties such as radioactivity
However, electrons have significantly
more freedom to move around in an atom than either protons or neutrons. In
fact, they can be knocked out of their respective positions (even leaving the
atom entirely!) by far less energy than what it takes to dislodge particles in
the nucleus. If this happens, the atom still retains its chemical identity, but
an important imbalance occurs. Electrons and protons are unique in the fact
that they are attracted to one another over a distance. It is this attraction
over distance which causes the attraction between rubbed objects, where
electrons are moved away from their original atoms to reside around atoms of
another object.
Electrons tend to repel other
electrons over a distance, as do protons with other protons. The only reason
protons bind together in the nucleus of an atom is because of a much stronger
force called the strong nuclear force which has effect only under very
short distances. Because of this attraction/repulsion behavior between
individual particles, electrons and protons are said to have opposite electriccharges. That is, each electron has a negative charge, and each proton a
positive charge. In equal numbers within an atom, they counteract each other's
presence so that the net charge within the atom is zero. This is why the
picture of a carbon atom had six electrons: to balance out the electric charge
of the six protons in the nucleus. If electrons leave or extra electrons
arrive, the atom's net electric charge will be imbalanced, leaving the atom
"charged" as a whole, causing it to interact with charged particles
and other charged atoms nearby. Neutrons are neither attracted to or repelled
by electrons, protons, or even other neutrons, and are consequently categorized
as having no charge at all.
The process of electrons arriving
or leaving is exactly what happens when certain combinations of materials are
rubbed together: electrons from the atoms of one material are forced by the
rubbing to leave their respective atoms and transfer over to the atoms of the
other material. In other words, electrons comprise the "fluid"
hypothesized by Benjamin Franklin. The operational definition of a coulomb as
the unit of electrical charge (in terms of force generated between point
charges) was found to be equal to an excess or deficiency of about 6,250,000,000,000,000,000
electrons. Or, stated in reverse terms, one electron has a charge of about
0.00000000000000000016 coulombs. Being that one electron is the smallest known
carrier of electric charge, this last figure of charge for the electron is
defined as the elementary charge
The result of an imbalance of this
"fluid" (electrons) between objects is called static electricity.
It is called "static" because the displaced electrons tend to remain
stationary after being moved from one material to another. In the case of wax
and wool, it was determined through further experimentation that electrons in
the wool actually transferred to the atoms in the wax, which is exactly
opposite of Franklin's conjecture! In honor of Franklin's designation of the
wax's charge being "negative" and the wool's charge being
"positive," electrons are said to have a "negative"
charging influence. Thus, an object whose atoms have received a surplus of
electrons is said to be negatively charged, while an object whose atoms
are lacking electrons is said to be positively charged, as confusing as
these designations may seem. By the time the true nature of electric
"fluid" was discovered, Franklin's nomenclature of electric charge
was too well established to be easily changed, and so it remains to this day
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