rafterman said:
Hi
It does involve the oil drop experiment, Plates are 8mm apart with the top plate is maintained at a potential of +500V relative to the lower one. The mass of the oil drop is 4.08x10-15 kg with a neg charge = -4e.
There is also a fixed charge Q=+200 x10-11 C 2.00mm horizontally from the oil drop which does not effect the charge distribution on the plates. g=9.81
Fortunately, the electric field caused by the fixed charge is perpendicular to the electric field field caused by the parallel plates (from the point of view of the oil drop, in this particular configuration). So you can treat both separately.
The only thing that affects the horizontal component of the electric field is fixed charge (from the point of view of the oil drop). So yes, you were on the right track with the E=kQ/r
2 equation for that part.
The only thing that effects the vertical component (in this problem) is the parallel plates. Approximate the electric field between the parallel plates as a constant (but still having a specific direction). You can calculate the electric field due to this finding the negative
slope of V, where V is expressed as a function of height.
You can calculate the slope of V using simple algebra. Remember, the slope of a straight line is the "rise over the run". Express how V changes (goes from 0 to 500 V -- the rise) with respect to how the height changes (goes from 0 to 8 mm -- the run). The electric field is the negative of this slope.
E = - (slope of V)
(There's enough information given here for you E in a parallel plate situation, but you might find it easier to look in your textbook for an equation that gives you E for parallel plates, as a function of V [the voltage] and d [the distance between the parallel plates]. Deriving the equations yourself is always fun, but I suggest as a first step, simply find the equation in your textbook)