Find the Zero Potential Point on the X-Axis for a System with Two Point Charges

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To find the zero potential point on the x-axis for two point charges, a +2.7 mC charge at the origin and a -7.8 mC charge at x = 1.5 m, the net potential difference is calculated. The potential is zero at two points: x = 1/3 m and x = -1 m. The potential difference is treated as a scalar quantity, allowing direct addition. Clarification is needed regarding the values used in the equations, specifically the numerators and the denominator of the second term. Understanding the formula for electric potential is crucial for solving this problem correctly.
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Homework Statement



A point charge of +2.7 mC is located at the origin of a coordinate system and a second point charge of -7.8 mC is at x = 1.5 m. At what point on the x-axis is the electrical potential zero? Calculate to 2 decimal places.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



net pot. diff will be zero at
x=1/3.
and at x = -1.

pot. diff is a scalar qty. so u can directly add it.

if the net potential diff at a pt (say at x,0) is zero,
we have
(k*3/x) - (k*6/(1-x)) = 0
2x=1-x
x=1/3

Similarly for negative x, u can make n eqn:
-(k*3/x) - (-k*6/(1+x)) = 0
which shal give u: x=-1

WHAT AM I DOING WRONG?
 
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Hi ziplock2k,

ziplock2k said:

Homework Statement



A point charge of +2.7 mC is located at the origin of a coordinate system and a second point charge of -7.8 mC is at x = 1.5 m. At what point on the x-axis is the electrical potential zero? Calculate to 2 decimal places.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



net pot. diff will be zero at
x=1/3.
and at x = -1.

pot. diff is a scalar qty. so u can directly add it.

if the net potential diff at a pt (say at x,0) is zero,
we have
(k*3/x) - (k*6/(1-x)) = 0

I don't understand what you are doing here. In particular, what are the 3 and the 6 in the numerators? And why is the denominator of the second term 1-x?
 
I'm sort of lost, as you can tell, and I need help.
 
ziplock2k said:
I'm sort of lost, as you can tell, and I need help.

You may have done a problem similar to this before when you studied electric fields. This one is done much the same way.

The first step is, what is the formula for the electric potential of a point charge? (What confused me about your post was that you seemed to have the right form, but I did not understand where the numbers came from.)

So what is that formula, and what do they variable represent?
 
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