Coulomb's Law: Examining Forces and Charges

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around Coulomb's Law and its implications on the forces between charged particles. Participants explore how changes in charge and distance affect the force calculated using the law.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants raise questions about the effects of doubling charges, halving charges, and altering distances on the force. There is an inquiry into how to determine the number of excess electrons on a charged particle.

Discussion Status

Some participants are attempting to analyze the relationships described by Coulomb's Law, while others are seeking clarification on specific applications of the law. There is an indication that guidance has been offered regarding the mathematical form of the law, although no consensus has been reached on the implications of the various scenarios presented.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working within the constraints of homework questions and are exploring theoretical implications without providing definitive solutions. The nature of the questions suggests a focus on understanding the principles behind Coulomb's Law rather than solving specific problems.

UrbanXrisis
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questions relate to coulomb's law.

What will happen the to force if:

one of the charge was doubled. (ex.q1 was doubled)
I think that the force would double as well right?

What if q1 and q2 were cut in half?

the distance is tripled?

the distance is cut in half? How do I figure this out?

What if q1 was tripped and the distance doubled?

Thanks
 
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See my answer on your other thread.
 
TO do this you need to look at the form of coulombs law. It is given by:
[itex] F_c=\frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\frac{q_1q_2}{r^2}[/itex]
where r is the separation distance btw the paticles and q1 and q2 are the charges of the particles in question. By looking aT what should happen to F when you say double q1 you should be able to figure it all out
 
If a question asked to find how many excess electrons are on a particle charged -4.0E-17C, what should I do? I know that the charge of a electron is -1.602E-19C but how do I know how many excess electrons there are?
 
If a question asked you how many tomatoes were in a sack containing 1 kg of tomatoes if each tomato is 200 g, how would you solve that?
 

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