I honestly had a lot of trouble with this concept, however, rewinding multiple times, taking notes, and reading your lecture notes over and over again really helped! I honestly think it would be impossible for me to understand this without your explanation! Thank You!
Wow Watching your lectures at medical college is just as fun as in high school, I try to watch your videos whenever I have free time it's just like watching movies and TV shows but actually better and more informative, You are awesome Sir and I'm really grateful for what you are doing YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY AMAZING.
This vid was a life saver, u couldnt imagine how much confusion i had in this topic, you got straight to the point and somehow read the doubts in my mind and answered them, well done!
U really desver milllins of likes ,,,,honestly no one is like u like seriously sooo carstal clear the concept is to me ryt now allll coz of u ........thankfull
Thank you very much for making videos for neet, I have been your subscriber since 2016 I'm aspiring for NEET 2020 and I really really needed that! You're an angel I you will be able to cover all the neet topics before exam!! ❤️
Thank you sir , helped it very much !!! Between your explanation along with demonstration in a way of different windowns at same time was Stupendous 🙏 !
Thank you so much for this. I was struggling a bit with this concept and this really helped me to understand what is actually going on. Really thank you, this video really helped.
10:00 when we grounded the electroscope, the electroscope didn't have any excess electrons to be transferred into the ground as charging via conduction Is just a change in the arrangement of protons and electrons in a matter. my question is, what exactly happened when we grounded the electroscope in this monment
Indeed there's no excess electrons in the electroscope but the electrons in it are pushed away by the balloon (as the electric force is a force at distance) to the ground
Hi. Nice video. I have a question about charging the electroscope by induction. Shouldn’t the electrons flow from the ground to the electroscope because you are touching the side accumulated with positive charges and by coulomb law, the distance between your finger and positive charge is smaller than the distance between your finger and balloon, hence the force of attraction is greater than repulsion.
Thank you very much for this video! It really helped me understand the topic, and It cleared a lot of questions that I had before watching this demonstration.
Disculpa amigo. De que material esta hecho ese corcho por donde se introduce el metal? He repetido ello con un matraz de pirex, un alambre de cobre y dos laminitas de aluminio, y cuando le acerco el globo, tambien un tubo de pvc practicamente las laminas no abren. Hay algun criterio en la eleccion del aislante entre el conductor metalico y el frasco de vidrio? Espero respuestas gracias.
Helped a lot, wonderful way of teaching. Had some confusion between charging by induction and conduction learning here in India, Got all solved. Thanks U🙏
For induction, in the demonstration you did, would it be the same if the object was positive, and make the electroscope negative? Would this still cause the leaves to repel?
For induction, since there is a positive charge at the top of the electroscope and he touches the top of the electroscope, wouldn't he feed some electrons to the top of the electroscope, and then when he takes everything away, the electroscope is left with a net negative charge?
Confusion: Induction method- The metal ball has more positive charge when finger is brought near it; so why dont electrons flow from finger to the metal ball by attraction of the positive charge on the ball? Electrons coming up from foil to go to finger/ground are being repelled by the balloon so it should be hard for them to flow to the finger… why in both cases electrons flow to the finger?
Sir, I have a doubt, please Reply.... When you rubbed the ballon , it got negatively charged....... BUT why did the Excess electrons did not flowed through your body and remained in the baloon🙄
If we keep the balloon touched to the electroscope longer, will the negative charge from the balloon all transfer to the electroscope? In other words, сan the balloon have no excess negative charge after the interaction (theoretically)?
No the electrons will distribute uniformly, there will always be more electrons in both as they will share that excess of electrons in a way they reach equilibrium which is both objects will have some of that excess, if the balloon became neutral this violates that the electrons try to reach an equilibrium as we observe in nature
I have a doubt why doesn't the negative charge on the balloon get neutralized when u hold it but the electroscope does when u touch the ball Pls reply awesome video love frm india
I wonder, what would happen if the positively charged fur (1) came in contact with the electroscope and (2) came in the proximity of the electroscope wherein in both situations, the balloon is still present.
The electroscope foils always repel when the object coming next to it is charged no matter what's the sign of this charge So in the case of the fur which is positively charged it will attract electrons to the top of the electroscope leaving the bottom with fewer electrons thus positively charged, then both foils will have the same positive charge and they'll repel as a result. Electroscope just tells if there's a charge or not but does not tell its sign (positive or negative) as it behaves the same way in both cases
It means the actual ground on which we stand. When we touch a charged body to ground, our body acts as bridge between the two and electrons are exchanged between ground and body, that balances out the charge and makes the body neutral. Here, the ground doesn't get charged because it's so vast and the very little number of electrons exchanged causes no net change in the charge of ground
The balloon is not a conductor, so when he charges the balloon from a side, charges(electrons) don't move from that side to his hand(i.e. ground) If the balloon was a conductor then he will use an insulating handle attached to the balloon to hold the it as he can't charge it if he holds it by his hand for the reason you mentioned in your question.
A pith ball is an insulator; and a wall is an insulator. If I rub a rubber rod with fur to make it negatively charged and touch the pith ball insulator, there is repulsion and the pith ball creates a physical distance to 'get away' from the rod - see time 1:40 here -> ua-cam.com/video/ojcfJ7baa24/v-deo.html If I rub a balloon with fur to make it negatively charged and touch it to the wall insulator, unlike the repulsion in the case above, the balloon is attracted and sticks to the insulator - the wall. See time 0:36 here -> ua-cam.com/video/bjU-Ll6U1ig/v-deo.html At first I thought "balloon attracts (sticks to) the insulator because the wall has a large volume for repelled electrons to move away from the negative charge on the balloon" and "the pith ball repels the insulator rubber rod because the pith ball is a small volume and its electrons cannot 'get away' from the electrons on the rod" THEN I recognized "wait a minute - the wall is not a conductor - there are no conduction band electrons - in an insulator, charge stays in one place and cannot freely move as it otherwise could in a conductor" So I'm a bit stumped. The atoms become polarized in an insulator when a negatively-charged object is brought near (negative rod, negative balloon) - just like the dielectric in a capacitor. So the insulator wall attracts the negative balloon, but the insulator pith ball repels the negative rod. Sort of puzzling.
why balloon not grounded during you hold it before you touch it by metal ball, if touching anything by body make object grounded then why balloon not get grounded.
Apparently if you touch an insulator that is charged with a conductor, the electrons flow from the insulator to the conductor as there are too many of them on the insulator The insulator prevents electrons to flow to another insulator and not to another conductor. That's what I know, there may be some better explanation
@@mohammadhashemi1771 If you kept the charged metal away any other charges then it will stay as it is, practically maybe you can't hold this forever all the way to infinity, but the idea is that it's possible to hold the charge of an object as long as we want by not letting it interact with other charges from outside
@oabdullae my setup requires and electrical current to pass through the metal at all time but the metal has to maintain the negative surface charge all the time
I honestly had a lot of trouble with this concept, however, rewinding multiple times, taking notes, and reading your lecture notes over and over again really helped! I honestly think it would be impossible for me to understand this without your explanation! Thank You!
Thanks
Dude's too good of a teacher that he had to become his own students
Wow Watching your lectures at medical college is just as fun as in high school, I try to watch your videos whenever I have free time it's just like watching movies and TV shows but actually better and more informative, You are awesome Sir and I'm really grateful for what you are doing YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY AMAZING.
Understanding this concept was difficult and this videos helped me A TON and I cant thank you enough
The illustration really makes it easy to understand! Thanks.
This vid was a life saver, u couldnt imagine how much confusion i had in this topic, you got straight to the point and somehow read the doubts in my mind and answered them, well done!
U really desver milllins of likes ,,,,honestly no one is like u like seriously sooo carstal clear the concept is to me ryt now allll coz of u ........thankfull
Thank you very much for making videos for neet, I have been your subscriber since 2016
I'm aspiring for NEET 2020 and I really really needed that!
You're an angel
I you will be able to cover all the neet topics before exam!! ❤️
Hello, want to share an update?
Bro
omg i have my science exam tomorrow and i did not understand this concept at all, but this helped soooo much thanks dude, i like ur hair
I hope the exam went well!
@@FlippingPhysics yes
I also do!
Ah... A wonderful demonstration
Thanks!
That's an awesome way to teach. Fr, I got everything in one video
you, my friend, are simply the best
Really great video. Thank you so much. Your students are geniuses!
Ive watched too many videos and i just theught that i wouldn’t ever understand static but you went into so much detail so well i got it
Your videos are amazing!!! This is pure gold!! Thank you so much!!!!
thank you once again fr one more amazing video and explanation of concept.......
dude needs to understand that not all classes have ideal students like his
Wonderfully explained!!! Thank you.
this video saved me omg acc made physics interesting
Thank you sir , helped it very much !!! Between your explanation along with demonstration in a way of different windowns at same time was Stupendous 🙏 !
Glad it helped!
Thank you so much for this. I was struggling a bit with this concept and this really helped me to understand what is actually going on. Really thank you, this video really helped.
Glad it was helpful!
Nice explanation thank you
Its help more thx for all this
thanks for solving this great head ache!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
from 12:04 , we see that the distance between metal foils starts to decrease before the finger even touches the ball, why does this happen?
Fantastic presentation
Thank u sm for this video! I understood it much better after this 😫 def gonna watch more of ur videos in the future
Nice explanation....thank you for providing this amazing video......
I❤ the video 🎉
THANK YOU SOOOO MUCHHHHH THIS HELPS A LOT AND WISH YOU LUCK ON UA-cam BTW THANK YOU :)
You are welcome
10:00 when we grounded the electroscope, the electroscope didn't have any excess electrons to be transferred into the ground as charging via conduction Is just a change in the arrangement of protons and electrons in a matter. my question is, what exactly happened when we grounded the electroscope in this monment
Indeed there's no excess electrons in the electroscope but the electrons in it are pushed away by the balloon (as the electric force is a force at distance) to the ground
100% great content
u cleared all my doubts , thanks a lot
Man I flipping love you !!
Hi. Nice video. I have a question about charging the electroscope by induction.
Shouldn’t the electrons flow from the ground to the electroscope because you are touching the side accumulated with positive charges and by coulomb law, the distance between your finger and positive charge is smaller than the distance between your finger and balloon, hence the force of attraction is greater than repulsion.
Thank you very much for this video! It really helped me understand the topic, and It cleared a lot of questions that I had before watching this demonstration.
Glad it was helpful!
Disculpa amigo. De que material esta hecho ese corcho por donde se introduce el metal? He repetido ello con un matraz de pirex, un alambre de cobre y dos laminitas de aluminio, y cuando le acerco el globo, tambien un tubo de pvc practicamente las laminas no abren. Hay algun criterio en la eleccion del aislante entre el conductor metalico y el frasco de vidrio? Espero respuestas gracias.
Helped a lot, wonderful way of teaching.
Had some confusion between charging by induction and conduction learning here in India, Got all solved. Thanks U🙏
Glad it helped
Well-explained
very helpful,ty sir
For induction, in the demonstration you did, would it be the same if the object was positive, and make the electroscope negative? Would this still cause the leaves to repel?
Wow this was really good.. now I understand 3 of the 4 ways electricity can be generated… maybe you can explain the fourth?
seriously helpful thanks
Thanks for explaining it more clearlyyy!!!
My professor could never.
this helped so much thank you!!
Thank you so much! Very helpful
You are very welcome
Brilliant
by indction if i touched without bolon
.did electron move to ground
It moves from u to the ground
This is really interesting to watch, and very informative ♥️
Thanks , that helped a lot!
I didn't scored well in neet last year and didn't got a med college 😭 I hope I'll be able to do it again
Hello rubber is an insulator. How is it able to transfer electrical charges to the metal sphere?
For induction, since there is a positive charge at the top of the electroscope and he touches the top of the electroscope, wouldn't he feed some electrons to the top of the electroscope, and then when he takes everything away, the electroscope is left with a net negative charge?
thank u so much was really helpful
Thanks a lot
Confusion: Induction method- The metal ball has more positive charge when finger is brought near it; so why dont electrons flow from finger to the metal ball by attraction of the positive charge on the ball? Electrons coming up from foil to go to finger/ground are being repelled by the balloon so it should be hard for them to flow to the finger… why in both cases electrons flow to the finger?
ur rite
Electrons will prefer to go to ground instead of being crowded in the foils since they repel each other in such case
TYSM THIS HELPS A LOT!!!
Glad it helped!
but when baloon touches electroscope how much electrons were transfered by the baloon to the electroscope? Baloon remained negativly charged?
Thank you!
Thanks a lot.although I’m not natively English your explanation helped me!
Wonderful!
Thank you! Man you helped me a lot
Glad I could help!
The induction picture in the lecture notes seems off...
Sir, I have a doubt, please Reply....
When you rubbed the ballon , it got negatively charged....... BUT why did the Excess electrons did not flowed through your body and remained in the baloon🙄
It is because rubber is an insulator not a conductor. I discuss the differences in this video: www.flippingphysics.com/resistivity.html
Good question! I had the same one
Please tell me where you got or how you made the electroscope!
It was purchased a long time ago. Do not know from where.
It's called a "Flask Form Electroscope".
He reminds me of Leonard Hofstader from The Big Bang Theory.
I love your vids!!!
Thanks!
Thnx alot sir.... 🙏🙏🙏Am from India.... N a hpy new year to you...
You are very welcome!
If we keep the balloon touched to the electroscope longer, will the negative charge from the balloon all transfer to the electroscope? In other words, сan the balloon have no excess negative charge after the interaction (theoretically)?
No the electrons will distribute uniformly, there will always be more electrons in both as they will share that excess of electrons in a way they reach equilibrium which is both objects will have some of that excess, if the balloon became neutral this violates that the electrons try to reach an equilibrium as we observe in nature
The people who found your channel are insanely licky
I have a doubt why doesn't the negative charge on the balloon get neutralized when u hold it but the electroscope does when u touch the ball
Pls reply awesome video love frm india
The rubber balloon is an insulator and the metal electroscope is a conductor.
I wonder, what would happen if the positively charged fur (1) came in contact with the electroscope and (2) came in the proximity of the electroscope wherein in both situations, the balloon is still present.
The electroscope foils always repel when the object coming next to it is charged no matter what's the sign of this charge
So in the case of the fur which is positively charged it will attract electrons to the top of the electroscope leaving the bottom with fewer electrons thus positively charged, then both foils will have the same positive charge and they'll repel as a result.
Electroscope just tells if there's a charge or not but does not tell its sign (positive or negative) as it behaves the same way in both cases
Can u explain permittivity of medium and relative permittivity
I explain that here: ua-cam.com/video/m8ZWnK2U7xA/v-deo.html
@@FlippingPhysics Thanks a lot
what does the term ground mean in the video
It means the actual ground on which we stand.
When we touch a charged body to ground, our body acts as bridge between the two and electrons are exchanged between ground and body, that balances out the charge and makes the body neutral.
Here, the ground doesn't get charged because it's so vast and the very little number of electrons exchanged causes no net change in the charge of ground
Sir! can you tell me why when balloon is in your hand and your are grounded why balloon not immediately become neutral?
The balloon is not a conductor, so when he charges the balloon from a side, charges(electrons) don't move from that side to his hand(i.e. ground)
If the balloon was a conductor then he will use an insulating handle attached to the balloon to hold the it as he can't charge it if he holds it by his hand for the reason you mentioned in your question.
Would it be possible to make the balloon neutrally charged once again?
By touching the area that has been charged with hands to ground it to make it neutral again
A pith ball is an insulator; and a wall is an insulator.
If I rub a rubber rod with fur to make it negatively charged and touch the pith ball insulator, there is repulsion and the pith ball creates a physical distance to 'get away' from the rod - see time 1:40 here -> ua-cam.com/video/ojcfJ7baa24/v-deo.html
If I rub a balloon with fur to make it negatively charged and touch it to the wall insulator, unlike the repulsion in the case above, the balloon is attracted and sticks to the insulator - the wall. See time 0:36 here -> ua-cam.com/video/bjU-Ll6U1ig/v-deo.html
At first I thought "balloon attracts (sticks to) the insulator because the wall has a large volume for repelled electrons to move away from the negative charge on the balloon" and "the pith ball repels the insulator rubber rod because the pith ball is a small volume and its electrons cannot 'get away' from the electrons on the rod"
THEN I recognized "wait a minute - the wall is not a conductor - there are no conduction band electrons - in an insulator, charge stays in one place and cannot freely move as it otherwise could in a conductor"
So I'm a bit stumped. The atoms become polarized in an insulator when a negatively-charged object is brought near (negative rod, negative balloon) - just like the dielectric in a capacitor.
So the insulator wall attracts the negative balloon, but the insulator pith ball repels the negative rod.
Sort of puzzling.
Great
why balloon not grounded during you hold it before you touch it by metal ball, if touching anything by body make object grounded then why balloon not get grounded.
sir, I have a little questions.
1) Can insulator conduct charge to another objects upon touching??? if it can, how???
2) Can insulator be charged by conduction??? if it can, how???
I try hard to find the answer but I can't find the exact answer.
Sorry for my bad grammar T-T
In my class, teacher say that if you attach the insolator that have charge to metal ball (conductor), nothing will happen. So, it make me very confused.# this is about question 1
The another question, can insulator that has charge be ground??? if it can, how???
Apparently if you touch an insulator that is charged with a conductor, the electrons flow from the insulator to the conductor as there are too many of them on the insulator
The insulator prevents electrons to flow to another insulator and not to another conductor.
That's what I know, there may be some better explanation
@@suparawichitkangosol7225👆
If electron flow through electroscope when touching ground then why it does not flow from charged ballon to ground?
Please anyone help me out !
t is because rubber is an insulator not a conductor. I discuss the differences in this video: www.flippingphysics.com/resistivity.html
is it possible to permanently give a metal surface a negative charge
Definitely if you charged a metal surface negatively it'll stay negatively charged unless an external factor changes this state
@oabdullae I know this the question is how to do it?
@@mohammadhashemi1771
If you kept the charged metal away any other charges then it will stay as it is, practically maybe you can't hold this forever all the way to infinity, but the idea is that it's possible to hold the charge of an object as long as we want by not letting it interact with other charges from outside
@oabdullae my setup requires and electrical current to pass through the metal at all time but the metal has to maintain the negative surface charge all the time
@@mohammadhashemi1771
Maybe you can cover the metal with an insulating layer to prevent it from losing its charge
you just saved me from getting a F on my quiz tomorrow
like the video😀
good explanation
make the acting better tho
I'm also from india
I am hoping to be able to reach more JEE/NEET folks. So, Great!
Me too
what a god
😀
I love you
6:15 bebe
dito ka start nood, para maintindihan mo ung conduction
epic
حسبي الله عليج يا مس الفيزيا شهالمشروع المعقد الي تبينا نسويه كفايه ضغط ياخي