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Coulomb’s Law Physics 102 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 9 PAL #8 3m +5e F12 -2e F23 2.1 m +7e Force on 2 from 1: F12 = kq1q2/r2 F12 = (8.99X109)(5)(1.6X10-19)(2)(1.6X10-19)/(32) = 2.56X10-28 N Force is to left, make negative Force on 2 from 3: F23 = (8.99X109)(7)(1.6X10-19)(2)(1.6X10-19)/(32) = 7.31X10-28 N Force is to right, make positive Fnet = F12 + F23 = - 2.56X10-28 N + 7.31X10-28 N = 4.75X10-28 N Direction is to the right Inverse Square Law Electric force: Gravitational force: Both are inverse square laws Distance is more important than charge or mass Decreasing the distance will greatly strengthen a force, increasing the distance will greatly weaken the force Computing Electrical Force F12 +q1 F21 -q2 Consider a pair of charges Draw an arrow from the experiencing charge either towards or away from the proving charge Note that the forces are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction (F21 =-F12) Resultant Force To find the net force from several forces add the force from each vectorially: Put an x-y axis on the system draw as arrow Find the magnitude each force F1, F2, F3 …. F1x, F1y … Sum the x and y components Fx = F1x + F2x … F2 = Fx2 + Fy2 X and Y Remember vector addition rules: Components along axis computed from: F Fy = F sin q Total F: Angle to x axis: tan q = (Fy/Fx) q q Fx = F cos q Spherical Charge Distribution An electron is a good example but, A uniform spherical distribution can be treated as a point source located at its center The Electric Field Electrical and gravitational forces act at a distance The area near the charge is said to be occupied by an electric field The test charge is small enough so that its field does not affect the main one Defining the Electric Field The electric field is defined as the force on the test charge per unit charge or: E = F/q0 E = k q/r2 i.e., the electric field at any point a radial distance r away from a charge q We define the direction of the electric field based on the direction a positive test charge would move Positive charges move with the field, negative against Calculating the Electric Field Need to find the magnitude and direction of the field from each charge and add vectorially Note that once you find the value of the electric field, the force on a charge at that point is just F=Eq0 Next Time Read 16.8-16.10 Homework Ch. 16: P 14, 17, 26, 30 Plates A, B and D are charged plastic plates. C is an originally uncharged metal plate. The electrostatic forces between some of the plates are shown. Will the remaining two pairs attract or repel each other? A) B) C) D) E) CD repel, BD attract CD attract, BD repell Both repel Both attract You cannot tell from the information given If you rub a balloon on your head and the balloon becomes negatively charged, your head becomes, A) B) C) D) E) Negatively charged Positively charged Neutral Its charge does not change It depends on the type of balloon How could you make a ordinary object positively charged? A) B) C) D) E) By adding protons By subtracting electrons By transforming neutrons By adding nuclei Objects cannot become positively charged A negatively charged rod is brought near one end of an uncharged metal bar. What will happen to the end of the metal bar furthest from the rod? A) B) C) D) E) It will become positive It will become negative It will become neutral It depends on the type of metal Nothing