184_projects:chasing_thunderclouds

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184_projects:chasing_thunderclouds [2022/08/16 16:05] dmcpadden184_projects:chasing_thunderclouds [2022/09/07 13:05] (current) – [Project: Chasing a Thundercloud] dmcpadden
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 ===== Project: Chasing a Thundercloud ===== ===== Project: Chasing a Thundercloud =====
  
-You and your group are a team of storm chasers tracking a massive thundercloud moving across the plains and into the mountains beside the town of Lakeview. You grab your handy-dandy high voltage probe ([[https://www.atecorp.com/ATECorp/media/ProductImages/L/Tektronix-P6015A_L.png|like this one]]) and radio, then drive from your headquarters 250 m until you are directly under the storm cloud. Thankfully, your team already calibrated the voltmeter to 0 V when the storm cloud was very far away. From your training, you know that if the electric field is bigger than 3 MV/m (also called the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric_strength|dielectric breakdown of air]]), the air will become a conductor and lightning will strike. You need to determine if a) you are safe from lightning under the thundercloud and b) if the lightning rod on top of the storm-chaser headquarters will be hit. The master storm chaser and part-time civil engineer, Edric Storm, tells you that the storm-chaser headquarters is 200 m tall.+You and your group are a team of storm chasers tracking a massive thundercloud moving across the plains and into the mountains beside the town of Lakeview. You grab your handy-dandy high voltage probe ([[https://www.atecorp.com/ATECorp/media/ProductImages/AdditionalImages/Tektronix-P6015A_R.png|like this one]]) and radio, then drive from your headquarters 250 m until you are directly under the storm cloud. Thankfully, your team already calibrated the voltmeter to 0 V when the storm cloud was very far away. From your training, you know that if the electric field is bigger than 3 MV/m (also called the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric_strength|dielectric breakdown of air]]), the air will become a conductor and lightning will strike. You need to determine if a) you are safe from lightning under the thundercloud and b) if the lightning rod on top of the storm-chaser headquarters will be hit. The master storm chaser and part-time civil engineer, Edric Storm, tells you that the storm-chaser headquarters is 200 m tall.
  
 <WRAP info> <WRAP info>
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   * Explain how electric field and electric potential are related   * Explain how electric field and electric potential are related
 </WRAP> </WRAP>
 +
 +Conceptual Questions:
 +  - What direction does $r_{source}$ point? What direction does $r_{obs}$ point? What direction does $r_{sep}$ point? Draw all of these on your diagram.
 +  - What would change about your solution if the thundercloud were the opposite charge (positive instead of negative or vice versa)? Does $r_{sep}$ change? Does the E-field change? Does the electric potential change?
 +  - What are the similarities & differences between electric field and electric potential?
 +  - What direction should the electric field point for positive charges? What direction should it point for negative charges?
 +  - What sort of assumptions did you make in this problem? How realistic are they?
 +  - How big is 1 Coulomb of charge? (how much charge is on a single electron, in a lightning bolt, on your socks when you rub the on carpet?)
 +  - What would change about your solution if you picked a different origin point? Pick a different origin & write out the calculation for the Electric Field on top of HQ.
 +
 +
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  • Last modified: 2022/08/16 16:05
  • by dmcpadden