Electrostatics Problems (all with worked out answers but wrong)

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around various electrostatics problems involving charged objects and electric fields. The original poster presents multiple questions related to electric fields, forces between charges, and configurations of charged particles, all of which have provided answers that are claimed to be incorrect.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster seeks clarification on their solutions to the electrostatics problems, expressing uncertainty about their correctness. Some participants question the reliability of the source of the questions, while others suggest that the test bank may contain errors.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants exploring the validity of the original poster's answers and the potential for errors in the provided questions. There is no explicit consensus on the correctness of the answers, but there is a shared interest in understanding the issues presented.

Contextual Notes

The original poster indicates that these questions were derived from a test bank, which may have inaccuracies, and they plan to discuss this with their teacher. This context suggests a potential gap in information regarding the correctness of the questions themselves.

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Homework Statement



1. A thin rod bent in the shape of a semicircle of radius 20 cm is uniformly charged along its length with a total charge of 8.0 microC. What is the electric field at the center of the semicircle?
a. 7.3 x 10^4 N/C
b. 8.4 x 10^4
c. 5.7 x 10^4
d. 3.9 x 10^4
e. None
Answer: C

2. Two charges, q1 = +2.0 microC and q2 = -3.0 microC are placed on the two corners A and B of a square as shown. What should be the value a charge q3 placed at the corner D such that the net electrostatic force on a test charge Q on corner C is zero?
a. 3.0 microC
b. -3.0
c. -2.0
d. +2.0
e. None
Answer: E

3. Two charges of +5.0 microC are placed on two corners of an equilateral triangle of side 0.50 m. The magnitude of the electric field at the third corner is:
a. 3.9 x 10^3 N/C
b. 2.8 x 10^4
c. 1.6 x 10^5
d. Zero
e. None
Answer: C

4. A charge of +3.0 microC is located at the origin and another charge of -4.0 microC is located on the y-axis at y = 0.30 m. The magnitude of the electric field at 0.40 m is:
a. 2.5 x 10^3 N/C
b. 3.2 x 10^4
c. 5.7 x 10^4
d. 9.5 x 10^4
e. None
Answer: D

5. The figure shows two 5.0 g spheres suspended from 1.0-m-long threads. The spheres repel each other after being charged to +31 nC. What is the angle theta?
a. 4.0 degrees
b. 6.0
c. 2.0
d. 7.9
Answer: C

6. Three charges of magnitude 9.0 x 10^-4 C each are located at x = 1.0m, y = 0.0 m, at x = 0.0 m, y = 0.0 m, and a t x = -1.0 m, y = 0.0 m. The one in the middle is negative, while the other two are positive. What is the net Coulombic force exerted by them on a negative 9.0 x 10^-5 C charge located at x = 0.0 m, y = -2.0 m?
a. 790 N repulsive
b. 1100 N attractive
c. 1100 N repulsive
d. 790 N attractive
Answer: D

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



*see pictures*

For second 3:

http://img695.imageshack.us/img695/8262/electrostatics4.jpg
http://img189.imageshack.us/img189/3112/electrostatics5.jpg
http://img706.imageshack.us/img706/4039/electrostatics6.jpg
 

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Please, I know there's a lot, but my exam is coming up and I would really appreciate if someone could show me what I'm doing wrong.
 
I don't think i see anything wrong with your working for question 1. Are the questions from a reliable source?
 
I think so; they are the questions that I got wrong on my last test for electrostatics. But it may be that the test bank is wrong, that has happened before. I'll have to speak with my teacher.
 

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