Calculating Net Electric Field at y=2.5m from 3.3μC and 3.9μC Charges

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the net electric field at y = 2.5 m from the charges located on the x-axis, first determine the distances from each charge to the point on the y-axis. Use the formula for the electric field, E = kQ/r^2, where k is Coulomb's constant and Q is the charge. Resolve the electric fields from each charge into their x and y components, then sum these components to find the total electric field. Finally, calculate the resultant electric field using the Pythagorean theorem. The approach requires careful attention to the distances and angles involved to ensure accurate results.
fendercaster
Messages
1
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


A 3.3 μC point charge is on the x-axis at
x = 4.9 m, and a 3.9 μC point charge is on
the x-axis at x = 2.6 m.
The Coulomb constant is 8.98755 ×
109 Nm2/C2.
Determine the magnitude of the net electric
field at the point on the y-axis where y =
2.5 m.
Answer in units of N/C.


Homework Equations


The equation I'm using is kQ/r^2
k being Coulomb's constant
Q being my charge
r being the distance


The Attempt at a Solution


I'm not really sure how to approach this problem.

My first attempt was finding the electric field of each. One of the problems I had was that I did not know what distance to use so I just found the mid point of my two charges (3.75m) and used the pythagorean theorem ( sqrt((2.5^2)+(3.75^2)) ) to find my resultant, 4.5m. I'm positive this is where I went wrong.

9e9(3.9e-6)/4.5^2 = 1467.7 N/C
9e9(3.3e-6/4.5^2 = 1733.3 N/C

Found my x's and y's using 33.7 as my angle.

Subtracted the smaller number from the bigger to get my nets and used pythagorean theorem to get the resultant which ended up being 266.9 N/C which was not right.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi fendercaster, welcome to PF.

Find the distances of the individual charges from the point on the y-axis. At the same time find the angle subtended by these lines with x-axis using tanθ = y/x.
Then find the electric field due to each charge at the required point. resolve the fields into x and y components. Find ΣEx and ΣEy. Then find the resultant field E.
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
Thread 'Correct statement about a reservoir with an outlet pipe'
The answer to this question is statements (ii) and (iv) are correct. (i) This is FALSE because the speed of water in the tap is greater than speed at the water surface (ii) I don't even understand this statement. What does the "seal" part have to do with water flowing out? Won't the water still flow out through the tap until the tank is empty whether the reservoir is sealed or not? (iii) In my opinion, this statement would be correct. Increasing the gravitational potential energy of the...
Thread 'A bead-mass oscillatory system problem'
I can't figure out how to find the velocity of the particle at 37 degrees. Basically the bead moves with velocity towards right let's call it v1. The particle moves with some velocity v2. In frame of the bead, the particle is performing circular motion. So v of particle wrt bead would be perpendicular to the string. But how would I find the velocity of particle in ground frame? I tried using vectors to figure it out and the angle is coming out to be extremely long. One equation is by work...
Back
Top