Robin04
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A charged and an uncharged particle collide. What will be their charges after the collision? The average of the total charge?
If the total charge is conserved, that only means that the total charge in the system is the same before and after the collision. But it doesn't say anything about its distribution.anorlunda said:If total charge is conserved, what do you think the answer is?
Robin04 said:But it doesn't say anything about its distribution.
I was a bit careless. The objects are not particles in general, but they are metal balls.anorlunda said:Good. That's true. But when things collide they might share their charge or keep them separate. There is no universal answer to your question. It depends on what the objects are.
Robin04 said:I was a bit careless.
The objects are not particles in general, but they are metal balls.
Same size. They are completely identical, the difference is just their charge.ZapperZ said:Are they of the same size? Different?
The average cannot be because of charge conservation, already said. If you also intended to ask how the totale charge is shared into the final particles, theni t depends on a lot of different cases, for example: the first particle's charge is +1e (or -1e) ?Robin04 said:A charged and an uncharged particle collide. What will be their charges after the collision? The average of the total charge?
Robin04 said:Same size. They are completely identical, the difference is just their charge.
You made quite a mess: "particles" and then metal balls, "average charge": if you have two equal metal balls, why you didn't simply say "half of total charge on every ball"?Robin04 said:I was a bit careless. The objects are not particles in general, but they are metal balls.
Yes, it made sense to me too, but this is part of a problem of a competition at my university and I was suspicious that it is too simple. Thank you for your help.lightarrow said:You made quite a mess: "particles" and then metal balls, "average charge": if you have two equal metal balls, why you didn't simply say "half of total charge on every ball"?
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lightarrow
If the resulting two balls have different diameters then their relative capacitances would make the sharing unequal. The capacitance of a sphere is proportional to its Radius so the charges would be distributed proportionally to their radii. If one ball were twice the radius of the other, the original charge would be shared in the ratio 2:1lightarrow said:You made quite a mess: "particles" and then metal balls, "average charge": if you have two equal metal balls, why you didn't simply say "half of total charge on every ball"?
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lightarrow
Sure. But in post #8 the OP stated "Same size. They are completely identical, the difference is just their charge."sophiecentaur said:If the resulting two balls have different diameters then their relative capacitances would make the sharing unequal. The capacitance of a sphere is proportional to its Radius so the charges would be distributed proportionally to their radii. If one ball were twice the radius of the other, the original charge would be shared in the ratio 2:1
Yes, that's right but the more general case is of interest and the result is pretty simple.lightarrow said:Sure. But in post #8 the OP stated "Same size. They are completely identical, the difference is just their charge."
Bye!
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lightarrow