Coulomb's force - magnitude of the electric force

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around deriving the magnitude of the electric force (Fe) acting on charged styrofoam balls in a lab setting. The equation for Fe is provided, incorporating trigonometric relationships based on the positions of the balls and the length of the string. Participants express confusion about how to apply Coulomb's Law without knowing the charges involved, while others suggest treating the charge as a variable. The conversation emphasizes the importance of using free body diagrams and balancing forces in both x and y directions to solve for the electric force. Ultimately, the thread highlights the challenge of deriving the equation while adhering to lab requirements for detailed steps and diagrams.
zachem62
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Homework Statement


Show that the magnitude of the electric force on each ball is given by
Fe = mgtanθ/ (cosα+ sinαtanθ)
where θ = arcsin(x2/L)
α = arcsin((y2-y1)/r)
r = √((x2-x1)^2+(y2-y1)^2)
This is a question from my coulomb's law lab, where 2 styrofoam balls where charged, one was hung on a string and the other was brought closer to it from 20cm away and the change in the hanging ball position was recorded. (x2,y2) is the position of the hanging ball, and (x1,y1) is the position of the other ball that is moving closer to the hanging ball. r is the separation distance between the 2 balls. L is the length of the string that the ball is hung on. If this is not clear enough, please see these links:
question: https://imgur.com/a/IrkZl
diagram: https://imgur.com/a/UzzMu

2. Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I am pretty confused about how to approach this problem. I drew the free body diagram for the ball and split the forces into their x and y components so derive Fe, and that hasn't got me anywhere. Whats a better way to do this?
 
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zachem62 said:

Homework Statement


Show that the magnitude of the electric force on each ball is given by
Fe = mgtanθ/ (cosα+ sinαtanθ)
where θ = arcsin(x2/L)
α = arcsin((y2-y1)/r)
r = √((x2-x1)^2+(y2-y1)^2)
This is a question from my coulomb's law lab, where 2 styrofoam balls where charged, one was hung on a string and the other was brought closer to it from 20cm away and the change in the hanging ball position was recorded. (x2,y2) is the position of the hanging ball, and (x1,y1) is the position of the other ball that is moving closer to the hanging ball. r is the separation distance between the 2 balls. L is the length of the string that the ball is hung on. If this is not clear enough, please see these links:
question: https://imgur.com/a/IrkZl
diagram: https://imgur.com/a/UzzMu

2. Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I am pretty confused about how to approach this problem. I drew the free body diagram for the ball and split the forces into their x and y components so derive Fe, and that hasn't got me anywhere. Whats a better way to do this?
You didn't include Coulomb's Law as the main Relevant Equation, but maybe just because you figured it was obvious. :smile:

So you get Fe from Coulomb's Law and the separation distance r, right? Once you have that, the rest is just trigonometry to solve the sum of the forces on the hanging ball in the x & y directions are each zero. Can you show us your work so far?
 
berkeman said:
You didn't include Coulomb's Law as the main Relevant Equation, but maybe just because you figured it was obvious. :smile:

So you get Fe from Coulomb's Law and the separation distance r, right? Once you have that, the rest is just trigonometry to solve the sum of the forces on the hanging ball in the x & y directions are each zero. Can you show us your work so far?
You're right it all comes down to trig and sum of forces in x and y directions. I figured it out now. Thanks.
 
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zachem62 said:
You're right it all comes down to trig and sum of forces in x and y directions. I figured it out now. Thanks.
Great! Looks like a fun problem. :smile:
 
berkeman said:
You didn't include Coulomb's Law as the main Relevant Equation, but maybe just because you figured it was obvious. :smile:

So you get Fe from Coulomb's Law and the separation distance r, right? Once you have that, the rest is just trigonometry to solve the sum of the forces on the hanging ball in the x & y directions are each zero. Can you show us your work so far?
Years later, I'm stuck on this very problem. I'm confused about how to derive the above equation for Fe from Coulomb's Law. How can I use Coulomb's Law if I don't know the charges?

I think I understand the trig aspect, and I know I could simply plug values into the given equation for Fe, but that seems like skipping ahead. The lab says specifically to include detailed derivation steps and supporting diagrams.

I also tried breaking the forces into x and y components but I don't think I can find the tension force without knowing Fe, unless T=mg? I've been spinning my wheels for a couple days now, any help is appreciated!
 
ngiro0862 said:
How can I use Coulomb's Law if I don't know the charges?
Just leave the charge as a variable Q for now...
ngiro0862 said:
I also tried breaking the forces into x and y components but I don't think I can find the tension force without knowing Fe, unless T=mg?
Do you have the same FBD as the original problem? If Ball #1 is below Ball #2, it will unload some of the string tension according the angles...

1641511598586.png
 
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berkeman said:
Just leave the charge as a variable Q for now...

Do you have the same FBD as the original problem? If Ball #1 is below Ball #2, it will unload some of the string tension according the angles...

View attachment 295207
Yeah it's identical! I thought that was the case, but I was trying anything.
 
Can you show your work so far so that we can check it?
 
  • #10
IMG_20220106_192810.jpg
IMG_20220106_192823.jpg

Hopefully that's clear enough. The last bit is where I went ahead assuming T=mg.
 
  • #11
ngiro0862 said:
Hopefully that's clear enough.
No sorry, dim cell phone pictures are no help at all.

Please type your work into the forum Edit window to post it. For math equations you can click into the "LaTeX Guide" link below the Edit window to see the basics of posting math on Internet forums (it's a good general skill to have, not just for the PF). :smile:
 
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  • #12
Gotcha sorry, first time.

I know ##m = 0.7g, L = 0.32m, \text{and } g=9.8~\rm{m/s^2}##.

I can obviously solve ##mg=6.9*10^{-3}N##.

Using data points ##X1=0.009m, Y1=-0.024m, X2= 0.050m, Y2=-0.019m## I can solve for $$\begin{align}
\theta & = \sin^{-1}\left( \frac {X2} L \right) \nonumber \\
& = 0.16 rad \nonumber
\end{align}$$
$$\begin{align}
\alpha & = \sin^{-1}\left( \frac {Y2 - Y1} r \right) \nonumber \\
& = 0.085 rad \nonumber
\end{align}$$
$$\begin{align}
r & = \sqrt {(X2 - X1)^2+(Y2-Y1)^2} \nonumber \\
& = 0.059 m \nonumber
\end{align}$$

Because the system is in equilibrium the magnitudes $$T_x =T\sin\theta = Fe_x = Fe\cos\alpha$$ and $$T_y = T\cos\theta = mg - Fe_y = mg - Fe\sin\alpha$$

As for the derivation from Coulomb's Law I am quite lost. Obviously I have the value r, which is the distance between the charges, but I still have two unknowns, Fe and Q, and I don't see a substitution, since T is also unknown.
 
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