Electric charge and fields: uniform electric field

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the magnitude of an electric field when a force of 6N acts on a charge of 3 microC. The correct formula for a uniform electric field is E = F/q, where F is the force and q is the charge. Substituting the given values, E is calculated as 6N divided by 3 microC, resulting in an electric field strength of 2x10^6 N/C. The initial formula mentioned was incorrect as it applies to point charges rather than uniform fields. The distance is irrelevant in this context since the field is uniform.
Dx
A force of 6N acts on a charge of 3 microC when placed in a uniform electric field. what is the magnitude of the electric field?

I have
E = k(Q/r^2... k=9x10^9 * (Q,charge=3x10^-9) / (?)^2

ths can't be the right formula caus e wheres r^2?
Dx [?]
 
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Originally posted by Dx
A force of 6N acts on a charge of 3 microC when placed in a uniform electric field. what is the magnitude of the electric field?

I have
E = k(Q/r^2... k=9x10^9 * (Q,charge=3x10^-9) / (?)^2

ths can't be the right formula caus e wheres r^2?
Dx [?]

You're right, it is not the correct formula. The formula you quoted is only for an electric field due to a point charge. That's not what you have here; you have a uniform electric field.

The relationship between force and electric field is F=qE.
 
= 6N

The formula for electric field strength in a uniform electric field is E = F/q, where F is the force acting on the charge and q is the charge itself. In this case, we know that F = 6N and q = 3 microC = 3x10^-6C. Plugging these values into the formula, we get E = 6N / 3x10^-6C = 2x10^6 N/C. This is the magnitude of the electric field strength in this scenario. The distance, r, is not needed in this formula as it is assumed to be constant in a uniform electric field.
 
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