Calculating Force and Direction of Coulomb's Law Problems

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the forces acting on charge Q due to charges q1 and q2 using Coulomb's Law. The user successfully computes the forces Fq1Q and Fq2Q, determining their components in the X and Y directions. The total force magnitude is calculated as 1.311N, with a direction angle of 25.43° from the horizontal. Feedback suggests the user has a good grasp of the necessary steps but should clarify the reference direction for the angle. Additional resources for practice problems are recommended to enhance understanding.
roy_ament
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I'm new in this forum, so i don't know if this is in the correct place..

Homework Statement


I got 3 charges
q1= 2.0x10^-6C
q2=8.0x10^-6C
Q=4.0x10^-6C
They're placed in the corners of a triangle like in this draw
Dibujo.jpg


I have to know the force that q1 and q2 act on Q, the magnitude, and the direction

Homework Equations



F=(kq1q2)/r2
for the angle which is 38.65 i do the tan-1 of .40/.50

The Attempt at a Solution


Fq1Q=( (9x109 Nm2/c2) (2.0x10-6 C) (4.0x10-6C))/(.50m)2

Fq1Q= .288N

So know i split in the components of X and Y right?
x= .288(cos38.65) Y= .288 (sin38.65)
x=.22N Y= .1798

Fq2Q=( (9x109 Nm2/c2) (8.0x10-6 C) (4.0x10-6C))/(.50m)2

Fq2Q= 1.152N

x=1.152 (cos 38.65) Y=1.152 (sin38.65)
x=.8999n y=.7119n
Now for the magnitude

x= .22+.899=1.119N
y=-.1798+.7119= .5321N

sqrt((1.119)2(.5321)2)= 1.311N
as for the direction
tan-1 = (.5321/1.119)= 25.43°so.. am I right?
all sugetionts are really apreciated, tips and stuff.. hope anyone can help me

sry if my descriptions are wrong, I'm from mexico and my english is not perfect:shy:
if someone also could give me other exercises for practice... it will be perfect!
 
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roy_ament said:
I'm new in this forum, so i don't know if this is in the correct place..

Homework Statement


I got 3 charges
q1= 2.0x10^-6C
q2=8.0x10^-6C
Q=4.0x10^-6C
They're placed in the corners of a triangle like in this draw
Dibujo.jpg


I have to know the force that q1 and q2 act on Q, the magnitude, and the direction

Homework Equations



F=(kq1q2)/r2
for the angle which is 38.65 i do the tan-1 of .40/.50

The Attempt at a Solution


Fq1Q=( (9x109 Nm2/c2) (2.0x10-6 C) (4.0x10-6C))/(.50m)2

Fq1Q= .288N

So know i split in the components of X and Y right?
x= .288(cos38.65) Y= .288 (sin38.65)
x=.22N Y= .1798

Fq2Q=( (9x109 Nm2/c2) (8.0x10-6 C) (4.0x10-6C))/(.50m)2

Fq2Q= 1.152N

x=1.152 (cos 38.65) Y=1.152 (sin38.65)
x=.8999n y=.7119n
Now for the magnitude

x= .22+.899=1.119N
y=-.1798+.7119= .5321N

sqrt((1.119)2(.5321)2)= 1.311N
as for the direction
tan-1 = (.5321/1.119)= 25.43°


so.. am I right?
all sugetionts are really apreciated, tips and stuff.. hope anyone can help me

sry if my descriptions are wrong, I'm from mexico and my english is not perfect:shy:
if someone also could give me other exercises for practice... it will be perfect!

Not quite finished. Without doing all the math, it looks like you understand the steps involved. I will presume that the magnitude and angle are correct. But what direction is the angle off of?
 
As to more problems you can look through this thread. At the bottom of this thread are some links to Coulombs Law problems. You can also search the thread for other topics of interest.

Good Luck.
 
LowlyPion said:
As to more problems you can look through this thread. At the bottom of this thread are some links to Coulombs Law problems. You can also search the thread for other topics of interest.

Good Luck.

thanks for your help!, I am looking the other threads right know, trying to solve them:approve:
 
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