screen shot
Screen shot of point charges and a field detector.

Electric Field Detector Wrong Model

The EJS Electric Field Detector Wrong model asks students to figure out what is wrong with the model with multiple charges with an electric field detector. The magnitude of the field recorded by the detector can be put into a data table and analyzed using a built-in data analysis tool. Users can examine and correct the model if Ejs is installed. 

Exercises:

  1. Add Charge to the simulation. Move the detector charge around and observe the electric field. For one charge in the model, verify that the model is correct.  What is your evidence?
  2. Add a second identical charge (the slider controls the charge of all the charges added to the screen). The arrow is supposed to show the electric field due to the charge with the matching color while the read-out is supposed to show the electric field. Which is incorrect (the read-out or the arrows)? What is your evidence? You may need to make some measurements to help determine what is wrong. If so, click on the Record button to record the values of the electric field as measured by the detector in the Data Table
  3. Clicking on the Wrench tool opens up DataTool, a data analysis tool, with all of your recorded data in columns. Some notes on using DataTool:
  4. If you have EJS installed, now that you have determined what is wrong with the model, correct it (be sure to check the Fixed Relations and Custom methods.  Describe how you fixed it. (Background required: arrays and for loops or see EJS Computing Basics.)

References:

Credits:

The Coulomb Force Wrong Model was created by Wolfgang Christian, Francisco Esquembre and Anne J Cox using the Easy Java Simulations (EJS) authoring and modeling tool. Exercises written by Anne J Cox.

  

You can examine and modify a compiled EJS model if you run the program by double clicking on the model's jar file.  Right-click within the running program and select "Open EJS Model" from the pop-up menu to copy the model's XML description into EJS.  You must, of course, have EJS installed on your computer. 

Information about EJS is available at: <http://www.um.es/fem/Ejs/> and in the OSP ComPADRE collection <http://www.compadre.org/OSP/>.