Electric charge produces an electric field by just sitting there.
It doesn't have to move.
If it moves, it produces a magnetic field. It doesn't matter how
the motion would be described.
-a definition of uniform electric charge-A dispersed colloidal particle can adsorb electically caharaged particles(ions) on its surface. The charged species adsorbed on the surface of a given kind of colloidal particle may be either positive or negative
Electrons are called electric charge. They are responsible for electric current.
Yes indeed, a current is just a moving charge. Even if the charge is on a comb, and you are physically moving the comb around the place.
That is not correct. Electric field lines originate from positive charges and terminate on negative charges. In the case of a uniform electric field, the field lines run from the positive plate to the negative plate.
Atoms have NO electric charge, only ions have (+ or -)
The electric field inside a sphere of uniform charge density is zero.
The electric field produced by an infinite plane of charge is uniform and perpendicular to the plane.
When a charge enters a uniform electric field, it will experience a force in the direction of the field if it's positive and in the opposite direction if it's negative. This force will cause the charge to accelerate in the direction of the field lines. The magnitude and direction of the acceleration will depend on the charge of the particle and the strength of the electric field.
An electric charge.
-a definition of uniform electric charge-A dispersed colloidal particle can adsorb electically caharaged particles(ions) on its surface. The charged species adsorbed on the surface of a given kind of colloidal particle may be either positive or negative
The electric field inside an infinitely long cylindrical conductor with radius r and uniform surface charge density is zero.
A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.
The acceleration of a charged particle in a uniform electric field is given by the equation a = qE/m, where q is the charge of the particle, E is the strength of the electric field, and m is the mass of the particle. This acceleration is constant and directed in the direction of the electric field.
My answer is NO, since vibrating electric charge cannot exist independently (conservation of electric charge cannot be violated). Vibrating electric charge can only exist as part of electric charge wave.
The total electric field between two large, nonconducting plastic sheets with uniform charge densities can be calculated by adding the electric fields produced by each sheet.
The conductor will not gain any charge that is not placed on it by you. However, the electric field will displace the free charges already within the conductor (by its nature) such that there will be a non-uniform surface charge density. Remember: a conductor must have zero electric field inside it, so the charges rearrange to cancel the external E-field. Again, this only repositions the existing charge, but it does not add or remove any charge.
Power plants (fueled by elements) produce the electrical energy that circuits to an outlet that you can charge an electric motor with a plug that is wired to an electric motor. Or if it is a vehicle with an electric motor, you electrically charge car batteries that produce the current to the electric motor.