Determine the Charge on a Particle

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To determine the charge on two equally charged particles, the mass of the second particle was calculated to be 2.26 x 10^-7 kg based on the given accelerations and mass of the first particle. The discussion emphasizes using Coulomb's Law, F = kq1q2/r², to find the charge, where the forces from part a are essential for calculations. Participants clarified that since both particles have the same charge, q1 equals q2, allowing for simplification in the formula. The conversation also addressed the need to rearrange the formula to isolate the charge variable. Ultimately, the correct approach involves applying the derived force and rearranging Coulomb's Law to solve for charge.
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Homework Statement



a.) Two equally charged particles, held 22.4 cm apart, are released from rest. The initial acceleration of the first particle is observed to be 4.0 m/s2 and that of the second particle is 6.0 m/s2. If the mass of the first particle is 3.40 x 10-7 kg, determine the mass of the second particle in kg.

b.)For the previous problem, determine the charge on the particles?

Homework Equations


F = ma, m = f/a, e = 1.609 x 10^-19


The Attempt at a Solution


I am able to determine the mass of the second particle which is 2.26 x 10^-7. The second question states that we should find the charge on the particles. I tried to multiply the mass of the second particle by 1.609 x 10^-19. But i don't think that is the right formula because the unit does not cancel. Pls, is there any formula for charge?
 
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From part a you have the force F. So for part b, you will have to apply Coulomb's Law.
 
rock.freak667 said:
From part a you have the force F. So for part b, you will have to apply Coulomb's Law.
The SI unit of the answer is in Couloumbs (C) mean while the SI unit of coulombs law formula is N.kg^2/C^2.
 
Pruddy said:
The SI unit of the answer is in Couloumbs (C) mean while the SI unit of coulombs law formula is N.kg^2/C^2.

Coulomb's law describes the force between two electrostatic particles. You have the force from the first part, you just need to rearrange to get the correct quantity.
 
rock.freak667 said:
Coulomb's law describes the force between two electrostatic particles. You have the force from the first part, you just need to rearrange to get the correct quantity.

Hi,
I don't really understand what you mean by rearrange to ge the correct quantity..
 
Pruddy said:
Hi,
I don't really understand what you mean by rearrange to ge the correct quantity..

If your formula is something like

F=kM/r

you can rearrange to get M such that

M=Fr/k


What is the formula for Coulomb's law?
 
F= kq1q2/r2 (Coulombs law formula)
 
Pruddy said:
F= kq1q2/r2 (Coulombs law formula)


Since the charges are equal, what does that mean for q1 and q2?
 
It means that q1 and q2 have thesame charge and therefore they will repel each other. As we know, like charges repel and unlike charges attract.
 
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Pruddy said:
It means that q1 and q2 have thesame charge and therefore they will repel each other. As we know, like charges repel and unlike charges attract.

Right so q1=q2, which means you can replace this by q2. So in F=kq2/r just rearrange to solve for q.
 
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