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Need GIF diagram here: magnetic field between north and south
magnet
poles, voltage field between plus and minus charges.
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Of several electricity concepts, the idea of "voltage" or
"electrical potential" is probably the hardest to understand.
It's also really tough to explain. It's a headache for both the
student and the teacher.
:)
To understand voltage, it helps a little if you first understand its
nearest relative, magnetism. Most of us are familiar with magnetic
fields. Small magnets are surrounded with an invisible "magnetic field"
which pulls on iron, and which attracts or repels other magnets. It
causes oblong magnetic objects (such as iron rods, or iron powder) to
twist and align to follow particular directions. Put a bar magnet under a
piece of paper, sprinkle on some iron filings, and the filings line up and
show the general shape of the invisible field. Obtain a small compass,
and you'll see the little pointer being twisted to align with the magnetic
field of the earth.
There is another type of invisible field besides magnetism. It is called
"electric field" or "electrostatic field" or "e-field." This field is
a lot like magnetism: it has lines of flux, and it can attract and repel
objects. However, it is not magnetism, it is something separate. It is
voltage.
Most people know about magnetic fields but not about e-fields or "voltage
fields." In part, this is because voltage fields are hidden away under
the name "static electricity," and they are never mentioned in beginner's
science textbooks. However, whenever a negative charge attracts a
positive charge, invisible fields of voltage MUST BE THERE between the
charges. The attraction between opposite charges is caused by voltage
fields which reach across space. "Static" electricity has nothing to do
with motion (or being static), instead it involves high voltage. When you
take a wool sock out of the clothes dryer and all the fibers stand
outwards, the fibers are following the invisible lines of voltage in the
air. Fibers are the "iron filings" that make the voltage patterns
visible. And whenever charges flow through a wire, they only move because
they are being driven forwards by a voltage-field which runs along the
length of the wire. "Voltage" causes dryer-cling, but it also causes
electric currents. Another way to say it: electric current is caused by
"static electricity," and "static electricity" is not necessarily static.
These facts are not explained in the books, and that's one reason why
voltage seems so complicated and mysterious.
Besides not being found in elementary school science books, Voltage is also missing from our everyday language. If we have no common words to describe something, we tend to never talk about it. For example, we have the word "magnetism", and most people have heard of magnetic fields. ELECTRIC fields exist too. Unfortunately "electri-cism" is not an English word. Everyone can discuss magnetism, but nobody ever talks about "electricism." Without "electricism," we have a hard time talking about electric fields and electric attraction/repulsion forces, and we never realize that they are important in electric circuits. Yet there is a word we could use instead of "Electricizm."
If magnetism is "that which involves magnetic fields", then what is "that which involves electric fields?" Voltage!Pick up some nails with a magnet, and that's an example of magnetism, then pick up some bits of paper with a fur-rubbed balloon, and that's an example of voltage. What are the three kinds of invisible field? Gravity, magnetism... and voltage!
Perhaps we should change the word "Electromagnetism" into
"Voltagemagnetism?" (grin!)
The two halves of "electricity" are "voltage electricity" and "current electricity."Still misleading, since the meaning of the word "electricity" is not clearly defined. But the above statement is not nearly as bad as the stuff they teach about "static vs. current." The motion of the charges is not important! Since "static charge" really means "separated opposite charges", we should not be suprised to learn that "static electricity" is able to flow. A separation of charge can move along.
NOTE: Do you see how K-6 textbook authors could be playing a game of
'telephone', where concepts are progressivly distorted by errors in
communication? Authors are taught from earlier textbooks, and often they
get their information directly from contemporary textbooks. Then they
write new ones. If authors make mistakes, what will happen? Start out by
saying "electromagnetism has two complimentary halves, voltage and
current". Decades later we end up with books which are teaching kids
something like this: "the two forms of electricity are static electricity
and current electricity." Wrong. Yet we can see where it originally came
from.
Voltage has wrongly been hidden within "static electricity" and declared
to be an obsolete and useless science, important only for historical
reasons. But in a certain sense, "static electricity" *IS* voltage.
Static electricity is a high-voltage phenomena. If we stop teaching about
"static electricity," and regard it as ancient and useless
"Ben-Franklinish" stuff, then we also stop teaching about voltage. Can
you see why voltage has become such a mystery? We've nearly eliminated
"static electricity" from high school science classes, and so we've also
throw away our basic voltage concepts.
So... is voltage a type of potential energy? Close, but not totally
accurate. Think of it like this. If you roll a big boulder to the top of
a hill, you have stored some potential energy. But after the boulder has
rolled back down, THE HILL IS STILL THERE. The hill is like voltage: the
height of the hill has "Gravitational Potential." But the hill is not
*made* of Potential Energy, since we need both the hill *and* the boulder
before we can create potential energy. The situation with voltage is
similar. Before we can store any ELECTRICAL potential energy, we need
some charges, but we also need some voltage-field through which to push
our charges. The charges are like the boulder, while the voltage is like
the hill (volts are like height in feet. Well, sort of...) But we
wouldn't say that the Potential Energy is the boulder, and we wouldn't say
the hill is the PE. In the same way, we should not say that electric
charges are Potential Energy, neither should we say that voltage is
Potential Energy. However, there is a close connection between them.
Voltage is "electric potential" in approximately the same way that the
height of a hill is connected with "gravitational potential."
voltage is like an electrical pressure or push, it can cause electric
charges to flow. Or, if flowing charge is suddenly blocked, this can
cause a voltage to appear. But current can exist without voltage, and
voltage can exist without current.
voltage exists in space, not just on surfaces. Rub an inflated balloon on
your
arm hairs, then wave the balloon around so it makes the hairs stand up.
You are seeing and feeling voltage in the space between the balloon and
your arm. Think about a 9v battery. The 9 volts aren't on the surface of
the battery terminal, they are in the space between the terminals, like
the magnetic field between a north and a south pole. A 9v battery is like
an "electret", the electric version of a bar magnet.
An inductor (an electromagnet coil) is an electric current device. A
capacitor is an
electric voltage device. If energy is stored in a shorted coil, the
energy is in the surrounding magnetic field, and there must be an
electric current circulating in the coil. If energy is stored in a
non-shorted capacitor, the energy is in the voltage field between the
plates. If the short is suddenly removed from the inductor, there is a
loud bang, and a huge voltage briefly appears. If a short is suddenly
connected to a capacitor, there is a loud bang and a huge current briefly
appears. Capacitor, coil. Electro, magnetism. "EM" energy.
voltage is the stuff that connects the protons and electrons of atoms to
each other, and it connects atoms together to form objects. Pull on your
finger, and you are feeling the microscopic voltage between the atoms.
Without voltage, there would be no solids or liquids in the universe, just
gas. When you break a solid object, you are defeating the attractive
microscopic voltages which were binding it's atoms together.
The bonds between atoms are often associated with a constant voltage. If
one atom
is positive and the other negative, then there is a voltage between them.
If billions of atoms could be line up in parallel, the voltage of the
atoms could be easily measured. What would happen if we could align
billions of atoms in parallel? We've just re-invented the battery. A
battery is a couple of metal plates immersed in liquid. At the surface of
the liquid where it touches each plate, all the atoms line up in parallel,
and a voltage appears
between the liquid and the metal. That's what causes the voltage of any
battery: the micro-thin layer of atoms at the surface of the metal plates
inside the battery. Everything else in the battery is just there to
provide the electrical connections and the chemical fuel supply. Ideally,
a flashlight battery could be three atoms thick (a thin film of liquid
sandwiched
between two thin metal films,) and it would still put out 1.5 volts.
Everyday electric motors operate by magnetic forces surrounding a coil,
with electric current in the windings of the coil. Let's call this sort
of device by the name "current motor". Electric motors in everyday life
are invariably "current motors", but "voltage motors" exist too. They
operate because of voltage-forces between charged objects. The
microscopic motors used in cutting-edge nanotechnology are voltage motors.
The linear chemical-motors inside your muscles are voltage motors. The
spinning cilia on the tail ends of bacteria are little voltage motors.
The mechanical enzymes which assemble ATP molecules (the 'energy
molecules' of the cell) are voltage motors. The tiny microscopic parts
inside a living cell are like little robots. They all rely on voltage
motors, none use magnetic motors.
Potential energy involves stretching, squeezing, pressure and forces.
Voltage is associated with electric charge which has been "stretched" or
"pressurized." Spin a flywheel, that's an analogy for electric current
and magnetism. Stretch a rubber band, that's an analogy for voltage and
charge separation.
Is magnetism like a warping of space? Then so is voltage. Voltage
and magnetism can be combined to become a travelling wave of warped
space. We call these waves "light," or "radio," or "electrical energy."
When the Electric Utility Companies sell you some "electricity", they
really are selling you pulses of "space warp" which are guided to you by a
pair of copper wires. They are selling you a combination of
voltage and current. When voltage and current are there,
electromagnetic energy is flowing down the wires.
Voltage is sort of like "electrical pressure", but it's not really pressure. Real electrical pressure is an attraction/repulsion force which is felt by physical objects. Electrical forces only exist when charged matter is being attracted or repelled, and if charged matter is absent, there can be no pressure, yet there can still be voltage. Analogy: if e-fields are like gravity, then voltage is like height above the earth. Voltage is not really force or pressure, in the same way that height above the earth is not a kind of "weight." Without the Earth and without height above it, "weight" cannot exist. Without electric charge and without voltage, electric attraction/repulsion cannot exist. Voltage is always measured between two points. Voltage is like distance in this respect. Analogy: At what height is your body right now? Well, your feet are on a floor that is a particular height above the ground. But you are a different height above sea level. And you are yet another height above the center of the earth. If a huge sinkhole suddenly opens up next to you, you will have yet another height, the height above the bottom of the hole. In each case your height is measured between two points: between the level of the dirt outside and the bottom of your shoes, between your shoes and the earth's center, etc. And the upshot of this is that your location does not "have" height, because it has several heights at once, depending on what two points you measure from. Voltage is very similar. A single wire cannot "have" a voltage. There can be a particular value of voltage between two wires. But the voltage between one of those wires and the surface of the earth will be a different value. And the voltage between that wire and the surface of some other planet will be different. One wire cannot "have" a voltage, because it has many different levels of voltage at the same time, depending on the two points you measure from. Suggestion: if you catch yourself talking about the voltage a wire has, it might be wise to entirely stop using the word "voltage" and instead say "potential difference". This forces you to think in the correct terms, since it is silly to say that a single wire has a "potential difference." Difference compared to what?! Exactly. What is voltage NOT? Voltage is not energy. It is closely connected with two classes of electrical energy: the energy of e-field flux, and the energy of charges in a potential field. However, voltage itself is not energy. Voltage is a physics concept called "potential", but voltage is not Potential Energy.