Calculating Electric Force of a Point Charge on a Charged Particle Thread

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the electric force exerted by a uniformly charged thread on a point charge. The thread has a linear charge density of 5 C/m and follows the curve y = (3/m) x^2 for 0 ≤ x ≤ 7 m. The point charge of 6 C is located at (3m, 0m, 2m). Participants are exploring the mathematical formulation of the problem and the necessary integrals to compute the force.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the use of the basic force equation F = k Qq / r^2 and how to apply it in the context of a continuous charge distribution. There are attempts to set up integrals for calculating the electric force and potential, with some participants expressing uncertainty about the correct approach. Questions about the sign of the force and the distance calculations are also raised.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with various approaches being suggested, including the evaluation of electric field components directly versus using potential. Some participants express confusion about specific calculations and the implications of their assumptions. There is no clear consensus, but several productive lines of inquiry are being explored.

Contextual Notes

Some participants mention constraints related to the complexity of the integrals involved and the potential for numerical integration. There is also a reference to the possibility of multiple-choice answers related to the problem, indicating that the context may involve specific expected outcomes.

ex81
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Charged Particle thread with linear charge force

Homework Statement


A uniformly charged thread with linear charge density 5 C/m lies along the curve y = (3/m) x^2 for 0≤x7m. The y component of the electric force it exerts on a 6 C point charge located at (3m, 0m, 2m) is given by:



Homework Equations



line integral equation

∫ f(x, f(x)) √([x(t)]^2 +[y(t)]^2)
fyi, the x(t), and y(t) are both derivatives, I just didn't see the symbol

F = k Qq /r^2

The Attempt at a Solution



As written I'm assuming that both charges are supposed to be positive. So they will be pushing away from each other. Since it is a point vs a thread, the force of the thread against the point will not create a secondary equation.
I'm not exactly sure where to go.

My point of integration will be very likely be from 0 to 7 as that is the value of x.
 
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Wow I was tired when I posted that.

Starting from the basic force equation.

F = k Qq / r^2

F = k(6) (the tiny cumulative charge as we go across the integral) /(change in distance) ^2

F= 6(5)k(3x^2(1+36x^2)^(1/2))÷(r^2)

F= 90k(x^2(1+36x^2)^(1/2))÷(r^2)
 
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I would try to compute the potential ψ, then E = - ψ.
 
Not sure how I would calculate that atm. My brain is a bit mush. But that does explain a bit of the sign issue I was having with this. I figured it should be negative, but I was just not seeing where it was coming from.


The r value should look something like

([x-3]^2+[3x^2]^2+[2^2])
So
X^2-6x+9 +9x^4+4
9x^4+x^2-6x+13


Therefore the answer should be :

F= -90k integral (x^2(1+36x^2)^(1/2))/(9x^4+x^2-6x+13)^(3/2) with x:0 to 7
 
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Not sure what you mean by 'negative'. I just gave the formula for the E field, given the potential distribution ψ.

The differential potential dψ would be kλds/r2
where r is the distance between (3,0,2) and an element of charge along the thread dq = λ ds, ds2 = dx2 + dy2 along the parabola. The parabola relates dy to dx. Then ψ = ∫ψ dx. The result is ψ(x0, y0, z0).

You can then drop the subscripts on x, y and z and compute E(x,y,z) = - ψ(x,y,z).

Actually, looking at it some, I suspect you might well be better off by evaluating the three components of E separately, bypassing ψ altogether. If you're really gung-ho you could do both and check the answers against each other.
 
ex81 said:
Not sure how I would calculate that atm. My brain is a bit mush. But that does explain a bit of the sign issue I was having with this. I figured it should be negative, but I was just not seeing where it was coming from.


The r value should look something like

([x-3]^2+[3x^2]^2+[2^2])
So
X^2-6x+9 +9x^4+4
9x^4+x^2-6x+13

The distance r between a point (x,y,0) on the parabola y = 3x2 (the thread) and the observation point P(x0, y0, z0) is given by

r2 = (x0 - x)2 + (y0 - y)2 + z02.

If you go with potential you can't substitute x0 = 3, y0 = 0, z0 = 2 until after you have computed the potential. See my previous post.

As I said, I woud on second thoughts probably try to compute Ex, Ey and Ez directly, forgetting about potential altogether, at least at first.
 
I'm assuming you are using
using U = kqq/r for the potential electro static equation. It isn't in my text, and I just saw that in another related post.
 
ex81 said:
I'm assuming you are using
using U = kqq/r for the potential electro static equation. It isn't in my text, and I just saw that in another related post.

Yes. If it isn't in your book then maybe you're not supposed to know about it ... in which case again you should maybe stick with E = Ex i + Ey j + Ez k. Then the force on the charge Q is of course just QE.

I've looked at Ex and I don't like the looks of that integral! I may be missing the boat here ... let's see if others also offer suggestiuons.
 
ex81 said:

Homework Statement


A uniformly charged thread with linear charge density 5 C/m lies along the curve y = (3/m) x^2 for 0≤x7m. The y component of the electric force it exerts on a 6 C point charge located at (3m, 0m, 2m) is given by:

The question statement as presented looks like the prelude to a multiple choice selection. Is that the case?

As noted by rude man, it looks like you'll be running into a rather nasty integral if you want to solve symbolically. A numerical integration would be doable though, if you just need the numerical value.
 
  • #10
That is correct, there were 5 possible answers but they all had 90k integral 0to7

My answer was correct. :-)

How my professor proceeded.

Given:

Lambda =5c/m
Aofx =0, Bofx =, q = 6c, xp =3, yp=0, zp=2, y=3x^2,
y=y(x), dy(x)/dx = 6c

Fqy = 5kq integral 0to7 [(yp-y(x))(1+yprime^2)^(1/2)]/[(3-x)^2 -y(x)^2 +(2)^2]

Then he jumped a bit, and got my answer.
Going back a bit, it looks like he started with the following equation :

Vector of Fq = kq integral over Q for the vector Fdq/r^3
 

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