Calculating Electric Force on Charges of 2.0 uC

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the net electrostatic force on charges arranged at the corners of a square. Each charge has a magnitude of 2.0 µC, with two positive and two negative charges positioned such that the net force on any charge is directed toward the center of the square.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the forces acting on the charges, including attractive and repulsive interactions. There is a focus on calculating components of forces and the need to consider all forces acting on a charge, including diagonal interactions.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the forces involved. Some guidance has been offered regarding the inclusion of all forces acting on a charge, but no consensus has been reached on the final calculations.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the assumption that the arrangement of charges leads to a net force directed toward the center of the square, which influences their calculations. There is also a mention of potential confusion regarding the nature of diagonal forces.

NotaPhysicsMan
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Ok,

the problem states: there are four charges, each with a magnitude of 2.0 uC. Two are positive and two are negative. The charges are fixed to the corners of a 0.30 m square, one to a corner, in such a way that the net force on any charge is directed toward the center of the square. Find the magnitude of the net electrostatic force experienced by any charge.

Anyway. I think that it is like this + -

+ -

So since the only attraction I see is : one positive to two negs, one across and one diagonal, no vertical but repulsive force.

So I do my components... Fx=kQq/r^2 = 8.99x10^9 (2.0x10^-6C)(2.0x10^-6C)/(0.30^2) = 0.3995 N. Since I got my x component and my y, essentially same, I do pythagoras and get the answer 0.56497 N for the net force.

Ideas?

Thanks!
 
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There are three forces acting on each charge. Your answer gives the magnitude after accounting only for the two nearby attractive charges. But you need to also include the repulsive charge which is across the diagonal.
 
diagonal? wouldnt' that be a attractive force?
 
So there are three forces one across, one diagonal and one vertical (repulsion). The repulsion force is the same as the horizontal attraction, which is F= 0.3995 N. The diagonal force, is 0.200N found by finding the length of the diagonal line. So to find the net charge, I have to break down the 0.200 N into it's components right? I get approx. F=0.141 N for both x and y components. I add up the forces. For Fx= 0.3995+0.141 N= .5405N. And the Fy=0.3995-0.141 N = 0.2585 N. Use pythagoras and get Square Root of (0.3589)= 0.5990 N?
 
NotaPhysicsMan said:
Two are positive and two are negative. The charges are fixed to the corners of a 0.30 m square, one to a corner, in such a way that the net force on any charge is directed toward the center of the square.
Note that this implies that the charges are arranged so that like charges face each other across a diagonal, like this:
+ -
- +
 

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