Calculate Force of Electric Dipole Moment

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To calculate the force on an electron due to an electric dipole moment of 3.76e-29 C.m, the dipole axis is defined as the line connecting the two charges. The electric field along this axis can be derived using the formula E = 2kp/r^3, where p is the dipole moment and r is the distance from the dipole. To find the force on the electron, the equation F = Eq must be used, where q is the charge of the electron. The charge of the electron is approximately -1.6e-19 C, which must be used in the calculations. It's important to ensure that the correct constants and units are applied, as electronic submission systems can be sensitive to formatting.
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mk here's the Q

Calculate the magnitude of the force, due to an electric dipole moment 3.76e-29 C.m, on an electron 2.23e-8 m from the center of the dipole, along the dipole axis. Assume that this distance is large relative to the dipole's charge separation.

Ok, i have a feeling this is a really easy problem, but I've like gone retarded and i can't do any physics it seems right now. So, first problem, i didn't understand what the center of the dipole was or the dipole axis. as in, halfway between the two charges, or when they're lined up the line that connects them, extended. I tried both to no avail... probably cause i wasn't sure what to do from there either. I tried just Kq/r^2, but i didn't know q, so i tried solving for q, but i know i did that wrong, because my equations weren't right. which i decided didn't matter cause i figured i was doing it wrong and that i should binomial expansion. But i realized i didn't actually understand how i was supposed to use it. So, I'm just stuck, i have no idea how to even start right. So some guidance in the right direction would be great, thanks...

~gale~
 
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The dipole axis is the line joining the two charges. You need to find the field of a dipole along that axis. You can either look it up or derive it. To derive it, just use the field from each charge (call them q and -q) separated by distance d (thus the dipole moment is p = qd). So the net field would be:
E = kq(\frac{1}{(r-d/2)^2} - \frac{1}{(r+d/2)^2})
I'll leave it to you to simplify this. (It's not hard.)
 
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i actually did get that far. and i use binomial expansion, um, reduce and i guess what i get is 2kqd/r^3 kd=p=3.76e-29
so i get 2kp/r^3 plug in p=3.76e-29 and r=2.23e-8
and it doesn't work, so i did something wrong. help!
 
That's the correct formula for the on-axis field from a dipole. Did you then calculate the force on the electron? What makes you think you did something wrong?
 
because i submitted the answer and it was wrong.
ok i realize this sounds stupid, but I'm getting tired, how am i supposed to be calculating the force on the electron?
 
So far, all we've done is calculate the field (E = 2kp/r^3). Now you must use the field to calculate the force: F = Eq_e.
 
right right, i knew that sorry. i got there, but i don't know q... so then what? I'm really tired now, if I'm asking too much, you can stop answering me, i feel like my brains turned off anyways.
 
Gale17 said:
because i submitted the answer and it was wrong.
ok i realize this sounds stupid, but I'm getting tired, how am i supposed to be calculating the force on the electron?
did you submit it through some electronic system? Some of these systems can be very picky about the terms you use.

for example

they may want the equation in terms of \epsilon_0 instead of k, so your equation becomes

\frac{qd}{2 \pi \epsilon_0 r^3}

...just a thought

.
 
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Of course you know q... it's an electron. What's the charge on an electron? (Look it up!) :smile:
 
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Doc Al said:
Of course you know q... it's an electron. What's the charge on an electron? (Look it up!) :smile:



UUUUGH, Jeeze I'm tired, and you its electronic, and its super picky... ugh
thank you!
 
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