Physics, asked by sunnysingh114, 1 year ago

Touching discharges the charged conductors due to what

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1
⚔️⚔️⚔️ Actually, it is most likely that the charged object is an insulator.

Conductors are very hard to charge. Any charge you put on them disperses through the surface, so the charge density is pretty small and there is very little repulsion (and the field given off will be small). Touching a charged metal ball will not give that much of a static shock because there is no strong impetus for the charges to leave the ball.

On the other hand, on an insulator, the charges can only spread on a limited portion of the surface. This increases charge density greatly, and there is a lot of repulsion and thus stored energy. The electrons, being in a repulsive field (with high potential energy), will take a route off the insulator if provided. So charges on an insulator are more mobile when it comes to leaving the insulator, and thus we use insulators in electrostatic experiments. Metals "eat" charge and don't discharge as much, insulators "hold" them until they have a chance to discharge. ⚔️⚔️⚔️

✨ mαrk вrαínlíєѕt ✨

Answered by sumitassalujapbywni
1

Answer:

Just guessing... Touching discharges the charged conductors due to conductors.

Explanation:

As conductors allow to transfer charges.

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