It s the same thing when you walk across a room shuffling your feet across the carpet as you go.
Rubbing socks on carpet.
Electrons which are negatively charged may be rubbed off one material and on to the other.
When you touch the door knob the extra electrons jump to the doorknob.
As your feet rub against the carpet your body either steals or abandons electrons depending on what you re wearing on your feet.
If you don t feel a static shock keep scuffing your socks against the carpet and try again.
It may be a few millijoules.
When you walk over the carpet in socks your feet rub electrons off the carpet this gives you a slightly negative static charge.
The two kinds of ice rubbing together act like socks rubbing against carpet.
The current that passes through your body depends on that voltage divided by the effective resistance of your body including any clothing shoes and other material.
The energy in a typical static charge from walking across a carpet is too low to kill a human.
The energy available is approximately voltage x charge.
Before you know it the cloud is crackling with electric potential and a bolt of lightning explodes to the ground.
When you reach for a doorknob you get a shock as electrons jump.
When insulating materials rub against each other they may become electrically charged.
You can tell whether you ve made static electricity by whether you feel a shock or spark travel from yourself to the other person or object.
When you rub your feet on the carpet your feet pick up electrons from the carpet.
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After rubbing your socks against the carpet reach your hand out and touch a nearby person or a metal object.