Coulomb's Law problem with three charged points

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a homework problem involving three charged points and the application of Coulomb's Law to calculate forces and electric fields. The initial calculations for forces between charges A, B, and C were performed, but the user confused force with electric field calculations, leading to incorrect answers. Clarifications were provided that the electric field (E-field) is expressed in N/C and involves different calculations than force. The user attempted to compute the E-field but struggled with vector addition and directionality, ultimately seeking help to arrive at the correct solution. The final correct answer for the E-field was noted as 2.34 x 10^5 N/C.
NotCarlSagan
Messages
9
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


TRHZ2.jpg


Homework Equations



F=Keq1q2/r2

The Attempt at a Solution



Using Coulomb's Law, here's what I've worked out:

FAB=0.593N
FAC=0.309N

Fx=0.309 - 0.593cos60°= 0.0125
Fy=0.593sin60° =0.514

√(0.01252 + 0.5142) = 0.514 N/C

and θ = tan-1(0.514/0.0125) = 88.6°

I'm not sure why webassign is telling me that my answer is wrong. I worked out a problem almost exactly like this with slightly different numbers and got it right...
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You're finding the force on particle A, but the problem asks for the E-field at the position of particle A. Do you know the equation for the E-field of a point charge?
 
I thought it was the same formula? Shoot. Idk.

I'll review the problem and post here again if I have trouble. I guess I was just looking for the wrong thing. Thanks for pointing that out.
 
NotCarlSagan said:
I thought it was the same formula? Shoot. Idk.
I'll review the problem and post here again if I have trouble. I guess I was just looking for the wrong thing. Thanks for pointing that out.

It's a similar formula, but the E-field has units of N/C (while the equation you used gives force in N).

Hope that helps. If you have more trouble with your problem don't hesitate to ask.
 
So would the E-field simply be:

E=ke(2.2x10-6)/(0.52) = 7.91 x 104 N/C?
 
NotCarlSagan said:

Homework Statement


TRHZ2.jpg


Homework Equations



F=Keq1q2/r2

The Attempt at a Solution



Using Coulomb's Law, here's what I've worked out:

FAB=0.593N
FAC=0.309N

Fx=0.309 - 0.593cos60°= 0.0125
Fy=0.593sin60° =0.514

√(0.01252 + 0.5142) = 0.514 N/C

and θ = tan-1(0.514/0.0125) = 88.6°

I'm not sure why webassign is telling me that my answer is wrong. I worked out a problem almost exactly like this with slightly different numbers and got it right...
Webassign is right to tell you it's wrong.

However, Webassign (or whoever wrote the problem) should have asked for the electric field at the position of the 2.2μC due to the two other charges.

Back to your issue ...

What is the direction of the electric field due to charge B?

What is the direction of the electric field due to charge C?
 
Ok, I gave it a try but I think I'm still wrong.

EA = 7.91 x 104 N/C
EB = 2.70 x 105 N/C
EC = 1.40 x 105 N/C


EAX = (2.70 x 105) + (7.91 x 104)cos 60 = 3.10 x 105

EAY = (2.70 x 105) + (7.91 x 104)sin 60 = 3.39 x 105

ECX = (2.70 x 105) - (1.40 x 105)cos 60 = 2.00 x 105

ECY = (2.70 x 105) - (1.40 x 105)sin 60 = 1.49 x 105

Ex = EAX - ECX = 3.10 x 105 - 2.00 x 105 = 1.10 x 105

EY = EAY - ECY = 1.90 x 105

So, √[(1.10 x 105)2 + (1.90 x 105)2)]

= 2.20 x 105 N/C

And \theta = tan-1(EY/EX) = 60°

Phew. I hope that's at least in the right ballpark!? I got really confused about when I should be adding and subtracting some of those vectors...
 
Crap. I think I already made a mistake...I was supposed to ADD ECX...

Doing that gave me a final answer of 1.92 x 105 N/C
 
Well I couldn't figure it out in time. This was the only HW problem I missed luckily. Apparently the answer is 2.34 x 10 5

I wasn't too far off with my first answer...if anyone could help me with the solution I'd be really thankful.
 
  • #10
Charge B produces an E field of, \displaystyle \vec{E}_B=k_e\frac{7.5\times10^{-6}}{(0.500)^2}(\cos(120^\circ)\hat{i}+\sin( 120^\circ)\hat{j})=k_e\frac{7.5\times10^{-6}}{(0.500)^2}\left(-\frac{1}{2}\hat{i}-\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}\hat{j}\right)

Charge C produces an E field of, \displaystyle \vec{E}_C=k_e\frac{3.9\times10^{-6}}{(0.500)^2}\hat{i}

Therefore, \displaystyle \vec{E}=\frac{k_e\cdot 10^{-6}}{(0.500)^2}\left((3.9-3.75)\hat{i}<br /> -3.75\sqrt{3}\hat{j}\right)<br />
 
Back
Top