Coulomb's Law, what charge will make the two charges in static eq.

AI Thread Summary
To achieve static equilibrium for charge q2, the charge q1 must be four times the value of charge Q, which is -3.7 nC, resulting in a charge of approximately -14.8 nC. The relationship stems from the inverse square law, where increasing the distance between charges reduces the force by a factor of four, necessitating a larger charge to maintain equilibrium. The calculations confirm that the force exerted by q1 on q2 equals the force exerted by Q on q2 when these values are applied. The discussion clarifies the misunderstanding of the inverse square law and simplifies the approach to finding the required charge. Overall, the conclusion is that q1 should be -14.8 nC for q2 to remain in static equilibrium.
rocapp
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Homework Statement


In the figure below the charge in the middle is
Q = -3.7 nC. For what charge
q1 will charge q2
be in static equilibrium?

Homework Equations


F = (K*q1*q2)/(r^2)

The Attempt at a Solution



I'm not sure where to go after acknowledging that Fq1->q = -Fq2->q
 

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rocapp said:

Homework Statement


In the figure below the charge in the middle is
Q = -3.7 nC. For what charge
q1 will charge q2
be in static equilibrium?

Homework Equations


F = (K*q1*q2)/(r^2)

The Attempt at a Solution



I'm not sure where to go after acknowledging that Fq1->q = -Fq2->q
attachment.php?attachmentid=56732&d=1363310960.png



Let's see ...

q1 is twice the distance from q2 that Q is from q2, and we have an inverse square law.
 
So that means the force is (3.7^2) = ~14 nC?
 
rocapp said:
So that means the force is (3.7^2) = ~14 nC?
The unit for force is not Coulombs .

Why would you square the charge anyway ?
 
I misunderstood the inverse square law.

F=q1=q2=k*q1*q2/r^2 = k*q1*Q/(r/2)^2

(9x10^9)*(q1*q2)/400 = (9x10^9)*q1*(3.7)/100

q1*q2/400 = q1*0.037
q2 = 14.8 N = F

Is that correct?
 
rocapp said:
I misunderstood the inverse square law.

F=q1=q2=k*q1*q2/r^2 = k*q1*Q/(r/2)^2

(9x10^9)*(q1*q2)/400 = (9x10^9)*q1*(3.7)/100

q1*q2/400 = q1*0.037
q2 = 14.8 N = F

Is that correct?
Doubling distance reduces force to 1/4 , so to compensate for that, charge must be 4 times what is would be at Q . (Of course with opposite sign.)

So, is 14.8 = (4)(3.7) ?

... Yes. So you're O.K.
 
Oh! Wow, that's a lot simpler than I was trying to make it. Thanks!
 
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