Recent content by Juan Pablo
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Find the x-component of the magnetic force on the wire
The force on a wire in magnetic field B is given by \vec{F_B} = I \vect L \times \vect B where L is a vector that points in the direction of the current and magnitude the length of the wire. So, \vec{L} = 0.29k \vec B = -2.04i-0.968j-0.328k Compute the cross product using a determinant.- Juan Pablo
- Post #2
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Help with finding parallel vectors
Yes, solve the linear system of equations.- Juan Pablo
- Post #5
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Calculate the direction and magnitude problem
You're calculating the force not the charge. The force q1-q3 is: F = k_e \frac{q_1 q_3}{r^2} The force q1-q2 similarly. F = k_e \frac{q_1 q_2}{r^2} You can find the angle in q1 corner using the tangent function. Now sum them like vectors and you're done.- Juan Pablo
- Post #9
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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How many currents on a DC circuit?
How kind! That was really useful collinsmark. Thanks a lot!- Juan Pablo
- Post #9
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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How many currents on a DC circuit?
Yes, but I'm trying to analyze more complex circuits using Kirchhoff's laws. The first step on my book is assigning the direction of currents arbitrarly. However, I'm not sure how many different currents should I put. Thanks.- Juan Pablo
- Post #5
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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How many currents on a DC circuit?
No specific circuit here, just a general question. Is there a general answer?- Juan Pablo
- Post #3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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How many currents on a DC circuit?
I understand pretty much everything related to this, except how many currents should I put when arbitrarly putting them. The number of resistors? The number of wires? The number of loops? I'm seriously lost here, thanks!- Juan Pablo
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- Circuit Currents Dc Dc circuit
- Replies: 8
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Buoyant Force Direction in the Millikan Oil Drop Experiment
Yes, but I don't know if the fact that there are electrical and drag forces changes anything. According to Wikipedia the apparent weight equation is: W = \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3 g(\rho - \rho_{air})- Juan Pablo
- Post #3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Buoyant Force Direction in the Millikan Oil Drop Experiment
What's the direction of the buoyant force? I'm trying to find the equation for the charge on the Millikan oil drop experiment. It requires two equilibrium equations but I'm not sure which sign should the buoyant force have. My internet searches neither my book have been able to answer this...- Juan Pablo
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- Buoyant Buoyant force Direction Force
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Question about surface integrals on E&M
Apparently I misremembered. Another question, doesn't the electric field varies with distance? How is it possible to take it outside the integral?- Juan Pablo
- Post #7
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Question about surface integrals on E&M
That's pretty much what I was asking. Thanks a lot!. But isn't \vec{E} \cdot d\vec{A} an abuse of notation for the flux?- Juan Pablo
- Post #5
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Question about surface integrals on E&M
I've seen on most books and in class that Gauss's law is usually stated like \oint \vec{E} \cdot d\vec{A} = \frac{q_{en}}{\epsilon_0} Shouldn't the integral be a surface integral rather than a line integral? I've seen times in problem resolution where they evaluate the integral as a...- Juan Pablo
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- E&m Integrals Surface Surface integrals
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Work done on a charge by an electric field
Thanks!- Juan Pablo
- Post #3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Work done on a charge by an electric field
Homework Statement Find the work done a charge "q" of mass "m" by an electric field of magnitude "E" when it's moved a distance "d" 2. The attempt at a solution W = \int_A^B F_e \cdot dr = F_e \int_A^B dr = F_e d = qEd I used the Lorentz force equation for electrostatics at the...- Juan Pablo
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- Charge Electric Electric field Field Work Work done
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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RMS of square, sine and triangle waves
Thanks again! You really cleared out everything.- Juan Pablo
- Post #7
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help