View Full Version : electric field
Can someone help with this? I want to say the answer is zero but I don't know how to explain it.
Calculate the electric field at the origin due to the following distribution of charges: +q at (x,y)=(a,a), +q at (-a,a), -q at (-a,-a) and -q at (a,-a).
Each charge has an E field described by
\vec{E} = \frac{kq}{\vec{r}^2} .
Just find the vector sum at the origin, or better yet draw it out and see if you can cancel by symmetry.
Thank you for the reply.
would i be correct is saying that
E= (+q*k/a^2+a^2)+(+q*k/a^2+a^2)+(-q*k/a^2+a^2)+(-q*k/a^2+a^2)= 0
??
Your conclusion is correct, but you measured the distance from the origin incorrectly, remember the distance between the origin and the point (x,y) is
\sqrt{x^2+y^2}
thanks again.
in this case wouldn't the distance from the origin be (sq rt of (a^2+a^2))? In the original problem all the charges are at (a,a),(-a,a),(-a,-a) and (a,-a).
Yes thats correct, it simplifies to [itex] \sqrt{2}a[/tex]
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.