Coulomb's Law: Direction of Force on -C Charges

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    Coulomb's law Law
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Coulomb's Law describes the interaction between point charges, where like charges repel and unlike charges attract. In the scenario with a positive charge (+C) and two negative charges (-C), the forces between them can be determined based on their positions. For two positive charges, such as 5C and 6C, located at different points on the x-axis, they will repel each other. Consequently, the force on the 5C charge will point in the negative x direction, while the force on the 6C charge will point in the positive x direction. Understanding these interactions is crucial for analyzing the behavior of charged particles.
jazzchan
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Dear all...

i have a question about coulomb's law as follows:

if there are three point charges are placed at the x-axis, first is +C, second is -C and the last one also is -C.

How could i know the direction of the force at the second and third one ??

best regards.

jazz
 
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You'll have to be more specific: where are the charges? I assume you need to find the forces that these charges exert on each other? Remember that like charges (same sign) repel and unlike charges attract.
 
Dear Doc Al

what is meaning of repel ??

if there is two postive charge at the X axis, one is 5C at x = 0, other is 6C at x = 40,
so what is the force direction ?? positve or negative ??

thanks

jazz
 
jazzchan said:
what is meaning of repel ??
Repel means push away. Attract means pull together.
if there is two postive charge at the X axis, one is 5C at x = 0, other is 6C at x = 40,
so what is the force direction ?? positve or negative ??
I assume you are talking about the forces they exert on each other?
Since these charges are both positive, they will repel each other. So:
(1) the force on the 5C charge at x = 0 will point in the negative x direction
(2) the force on the 6C charge at x = 40 will point in the positive x direction

Make sense?
 
thanks a lot !
 
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