Electric Field at Point C with Multiple Sheets

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the electric field at a specific point (Point C) between two large, nonconducting plastic sheets with given uniform charge densities. The charge densities are specified as a = -6.00 nC, b = +5.00 nC, c = +2.00 nC, and d = +4.00 nC.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the application of the formula for the electric field due to infinite sheets of charge and the need to consider the contributions from all surfaces. There are questions about the calculations leading to different results, and some participants express uncertainty about the correct interpretation of charge units.

Discussion Status

The discussion includes attempts to clarify the calculations and the reasoning behind the electric field contributions from each sheet. One participant has indicated they resolved their confusion regarding the answer, while others are still exploring the calculations and questioning the results they obtained.

Contextual Notes

Participants note potential confusion regarding the charge units (nanoCoulombs vs. microCoulombs) and the importance of considering all charge contributions in the calculation.

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Homework Statement


Two very large, nonconducting plastic sheets, each 10.0 cm thick, carry uniform charge densities a,b,c,d on their surfaces. These surface charge densities have the values a= -6.00 nC, b= +5.00 nC, c= +2.00 nC, and d= +4.00 n\C.

Find the magnitude of the electric field at the point C, in the middle of the right-hand sheet.

looks like:


a----10 cm------b------12cm-----c------10cm------d
Point C is here----------------------------->



Homework Equations


Infinite sheet of charge field (charge)/(2*epsilon_0) N/C


The Attempt at a Solution


Well because the sheet is "Two very large, nonconducting plastic sheets," I treated them as thin infinite sheets with the distance of the thickness between them.

Adding the electric force vectors does not yield the correct answer, not sure where to go from there. I get the answer 169.491. I am not off by an order of magnitude even though it looks so. I have other problems of the same type that also give incorrect results.

I know the answer is 1.69×10^6 N/C but I am not sure how to get there.
 
Last edited:
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Close this I figured it out, the answer I was given as "correct" was the wrong one there was another answer in the paragraph talking about a correction. This was actually noted in the paragraph I just passed over it. I also used nanoC rather than micro Columbs, the symbols looked similar in the problem and I thought it it said n not the mu symbol.

The answer was 1.69×10^5 N/C.
 
Last edited:
can you explain how you did this calculation? when I use the formula for the electric field due to an infinite sheet of charge that you have entered in your first post, i get 1.129x10^5 N/C instead of 1.69x10^5

I have simply ((4x10^-6)-(2x10^-6))/(2*E_o) = 1.129x10^5

thanks
 
ok i realized you must add the charges from all 4 surfaces
so 2+5-4-6= -3microcoulombs
 

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