What is the Work Needed to Move a Charge?

In summary, the conversation discusses finding the amount of work needed to move a charge in a specific scenario. Two different approaches are considered, but neither yields the correct answer. Eventually, it is determined that the work done is equal to the difference in potential energy between the initial and final positions, and the correct answer is found.
  • #1
ttiger2k7
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[SOLVED] Work Needed to Move a Charge

Homework Statement


Three identical point charges Q1, Q2, and Q3 all having charge 3 microCoulombs are located at the vertices of an equilateral triangle with sides s=3 m. How much work would I have to do to move Q1 to a point on the line connecting Q2 and !3 (which are fixed) if this point is a distance .4 s from Q2 and a distance .6 s from Q3?

http://img129.imageshack.us/img129/1091/trianglejp1.th.gif
(Picture obviously not drawn to scale)

Homework Equations


W = Fd = qEd
E = kQ/d

The Attempt at a Solution


I am using q = 3*10^-6 Coulombs in all of my attempts. The thing that is throwing me off is what to use as the distance and electric field.

I did two different approaches:

Attempt 1
First I tried to find the distance between Q1 and its destination point. I just made a right triangle:
http://img98.imageshack.us/img98/1240/88380904mi7.gif
And the hypotenuse was sqrt(2.34).

Then,

E = kq/d
E = (9*10^9)(3*10^-6)/sqrt(2.34)
E = 17650.45216 N/C

So I plugged in E to the formula for Work

W = qEd
W = (3*10^-6)(17650.45216)(sqrt(2.34))
W = .081 J

Attempt 2
I tried to calculate the electric field at the point Q1 between Q2 and Q3. For distance i used 1.2 (.4*3m) and 1.8 (.6*3m).

First,

E_tot = E1 + E2
E=kq/d^2 (electric field at a point between two charges)
E1=(9*10^9)(3*10^-6)/1.2^2
E1=18750

E2=(9*10^9)(3*10^-6)/1.8^2
E2=-8333.34 (rounded up, because it was .3 repeating, negative because the direction of the field that acting on Q1 is to the left)

E_tot = E1+E2
E_tot = 18750 - 8333.34 = 10416.67

Then,

W = qEd
d will remain the same as in attempt 1.
W = (3*10^-6)(10416.67)(sqrt(2.34))
W = .0478 J

---

There you have it. Neither of them were the right answer. Please help. I know I am close but like I said, I am confused as what to use for E and d. Thank you.
 
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  • #2
Work done = difference in PE between final position and initial position.

You know the Potential at the initial and final posn due to Q2 and Q3.
 
  • #3
UE at initial point:

UE = k(3*10^-6)^2/3 = .027
Since that is the same for both charges, the answer is .054.

UE at bottom:

UE = k(3*10^-6)^2/1.8 = .045
UE = k((3*10^-6)^2/1.2 = .0675
Tot = .1125

UE_ini - UE_final = .1125-.054 = .0585 J Which was the correct answer.

Thanks a bunch! I really appreciate the quick reply. That helped a lot. :)
 

1. What is work needed to move a charge?

The work needed to move a charge is the amount of energy required to move a charged particle from one point to another in an electric field.

2. How is the work needed to move a charge calculated?

The work needed to move a charge is calculated by multiplying the magnitude of the charge (q) by the potential difference (V) between the two points, or W = qV.

3. What is the unit of measurement for work needed to move a charge?

The unit of measurement for work needed to move a charge is joules (J), the same unit used to measure energy.

4. Does the direction of the charge's movement affect the work needed?

Yes, the direction of the charge's movement does affect the work needed. If the charge is moving in the same direction as the electric field, the work done is positive. If the charge is moving in the opposite direction of the electric field, the work done is negative.

5. Can the work needed to move a charge be negative?

Yes, the work needed to move a charge can be negative. This means that the charge is moving in the opposite direction of the electric field, and the work done is being converted into potential energy.

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