Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

static electricity

created by Fourier

(thing) by AwkwardSaw (6.2 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 2 C!s Fri Dec 21 2001 at 15:29:29

Static electricity is what causes those little sparks when you rub a part of your body against something like a carpet or a balloon and touch a metallic object. The buildup of voltage on your body when you do so is on the magnitude of kilovolts, but static electricity is not dangerous at all. It's called static because there is no current involved with the transfer of charges from surface to surface. The charges flow naturally, however, so static electricity is not truly "static".

When two surfaces rub against each other, there will be some transfer of charge. In the case of static electricity they will stay because they won't conduct back to their "homes". Electrons go from one surface to another as a result of electrical forces, not friction. The more surface area exposed, though, the more chances electrons have to form bonds and be transferred. Which material gives up its electrons and which will take them depends on a property called triboelectricity.

When this is done, there are extra electrons on one surface, giving it a net negative electrical charge. The other surface, which donated the electrons, has a net positive electrical charge. Since there are so many like charges on the surface, the surface is acting almost like a capacitor. When you touch a Van de Graaff generator, like charges build up in your body. Since opposites attract and likes repel, the hairs on your head are trying to get as far away from each other as possible by standing on end.

Those extra electrons will bleed off over time, but they can be released instantly through contact with a conductor. Metal has a high conductance. When a statically charged surface and a conductor come together, there is an instantaneous transfer of electrons, causing a small spark.

There is a lot of voltage involved in static electricity, but it is nothing to worry about. It's not voltage, but power that can cause damage . Power is equal to voltage times current. Since there is almost no current involved here, the amount of power that is produced is very low. Even if you were to build up 10,000 volts on a surface through static electricity, a current of 0.1 milliampere would produce only one watt of power.


printable version
chaos

spark static Van de Graaff generator electron
electricity I am the God of Static Electricity and Vibrators Mimeograph lightning
RimRod the Human Tesla Coil Nikola Tesla anti-static bag Direct current
stroke the cat Limiting the number of fuzzy shirts allowed in one room static protection bag I felt a disturbance in the fun, as if a million playgrounds cried out, and then
Why won't several thousand Volts of static electricity kill me? Hindenburg Life sucks. Get over it. Humidifier
On fighting in mufti Bond iT general purpose adhesive Homemade Compass Websterscape
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
Things you could have written:
Lawrence Durrell
bridge
Stained Glass Primer
DDT
Rulers of England
Pledge of death
Lonely in a crowded room
Art Spiegelman
reincarnation
Brad, what if I told you I belonged to a network of freedom fighters?
The Two Cultures
Alcibiades
Marlene Dietrich
New Writeups
antigravpussy
One fly amongst many(person)
sam512
Moon Base Shackleton, 1978(fiction)
Pavlovna
toy boy(person)
XWiz
tear jerker(review)
Heitah
Anarchy is Order(idea)
jessicaj
July 26, 2008(dream)
Berek
ABBA(person)
devolution
k-hole(place)
Nadine_2
The Sound Of Madness(review)
SwimmingMonkey
Conversations with Fo Fo, the Loneliest dog in Purgatory(fiction)
locke baron
lynx(thing)
Simulacron3
Reality, Dimensions and the Natural Ontology(essay)
SubSane
Making Love to a 9-Foot Woman(person)
Ouzo
Thoughts(idea)
antigravpussy
I fall silent, listening. The breadcrumbs are talking about us(person)
This page courtesy of The Everything Development Company