View Full Version : Electric Field/Force btw rods
AgPIper
Jul19-04, 08:50 PM
Identical thin rods of length (2a) carry equal charges +Q uniformly distributed along their lengths.
The rods lie on (along) the x axis with their *centers* separated by a distance b > 2a.
(Left rod from x=-a to x=a, right rod from x=b-a to x=b+a)
Show that the magnitude of the force exerted by the left rod on the right one is
F = k_e\frac{Q^2}{4a^2} \ln \frac{b^2}{b^2-4a^2}
Thanks very much for answering :-)
wisky40
Jul21-04, 02:12 AM
if you want you can use this ideas: q=\lambda2a or for a small piece
dq=\lambdadx in this case I'm not going to write the electric field as vector because is in the same direction. -->
E=K\lambda\int_{-a}^a\frac{dx_1}{r^2}and r=x_1+x_2+b because x_1 is the variable on the first rod , x_2 on the other and b is the ditance between them. After this you can integrate with respect dx_2 and take again the interval from a to -a and you'll get the result your looking for.
wisky40
Jul21-04, 02:23 AM
I'm sorry my Latex is not good.However, dq=(lambda)dx and make these substitutions
dr=dx_1 , x_2+b= constants for the first integral. I hope this hepls.
-wisky40
wisky40
Jul21-04, 11:21 AM
I'm going to give you some hints more:
dF=E\lambdadx_2
F=\int_{-a}^aE\lambdadx_2
and finally
\lambda^2=\frac{q^2}{4a^2}
-wisky40
wisky40
Jul21-04, 11:25 AM
I'm sorry my Latex still bad
F=int of E(lambda)dx_2 ,from -a to a
-wisky40
e(ho0n3
Jul21-04, 12:20 PM
This reminds me of a problem where I had to find the gravitational force on one rod due to the other. This was a problem in my Calc. book. The easiest way to solve this is to find the force on a point by the rod and then extending the point into a rod.
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