Find the magnitude of the electric field at point P

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The discussion focuses on calculating the electric field at point P due to two identical charged spheres positioned at the vertices of an equilateral triangle. The initial calculations incorrectly used the distance to the midpoint instead of the correct distance to point P, which is 3m. After correcting this, the resultant electric field components were recalculated, leading to a net electric field of 5196 N/C. The final answer choice is confirmed to be B. The importance of accurately identifying the distance in electric field calculations is emphasized.
paulimerci
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Homework Statement
Question posted below.
Relevant Equations
E = kq/r^2
There are two identical spheres with the same charge that are the vertices of an equilateral triangle. ##+3 \mu C## will exert an outward electric field, which is drawn in the FBD below (see the attached pic), Since the horizontal force components (1x and 2x) are equal and opposite at point P, we can cancel those two vectors, and the remaining y component vectors will give the resultant magnitude of the electric field at point P.
$$ E = \frac {kq}{r^2}$$
$$ E_{1y} = \frac {8.99 \times 10^9 \times 3 \times 10^-6 sin 60} {6.76}$$
$$ E_{1y} = 3455 N/C$$

$$E_{2y} = \frac {8.99 \times 10^9 \times 3 \times 10^-6 sin 60} {6.76}$$
$$ E_{2y} = 3455 N/C$$
$$ E _{net} = 6910 N/C$$
I'm not sure where I made a mistake because none of the answers match my answer. Can anyone point out where my mistake is?
 

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What does r represent in your relevant equation? Think.
 
haruspex said:
What does r represent in your relevant equation? Think.
r is the distance between the charge and the reference point (P).
 
paulimerci said:
r is the distance between the charge and the reference point (P).
I see where I did a mistake I took the wrong distance (between P and the midpoint between two charges). r=3m, Is ##E_{1y} + E_{2y} = 2598+2598 = 5196 N/C##. So the answer choice is B?
 
paulimerci said:
I see where I did a mistake I took the wrong distance (between P and the midpoint between two charges). r=3m, Is ##E_{1y} + E_{2y} = 2598+2598 = 5196 N/C##. So the answer choice is B?
Looks right.
 
haruspex said:
Looks right.
Thank you!
 
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