so, should I set the electric fields due to each charge equal to each other and solve for d?
maybe, E1= kq1/d^2, E2=kq2/d^2 and so kq1/d^2=kq2/d^2 and d=square root(kq1+kq2)
I did this, but I get d to be 9.58 m, which doesn't sound reasonable
Is there a better way of doing this?
Homework Statement
A. Two particles having charges of 0.600 nC and 9.60 nC are separated by a distance of 1.60 m. At what point along the line connecting the two charges is the net electric field due to the two charges equal to zero?
B. Where would the net electric field be zero if one of...