Four Charged Particles in a Square

AI Thread Summary
The problem involves four charged particles arranged in a square, with specific charges assigned to each particle. The goal is to determine the ratio q/Q such that the net electrostatic force on particle 1 is zero. The initial approach included calculating the forces exerted on particle 1 by particles 2, 3, and 4, using the electrostatic force formula and the Pythagorean theorem to find distances. A mistake was identified in calculating the resultant force from particles 2 and 3, which should be treated as vector components. After correcting this, the correct ratio was found to be q/Q = 1.31.
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Homework Statement


In the figure below, four particles form a square. The charges are q1 = +Q, q2 = q3 = q, and q4 = -5.25Q. What is q/Q if the net electrostatic force on particle 1 is zero?
hrw7_21-22.gif



Homework Equations


F=k|q1||q2|/r2
a2+b2=c2


The Attempt at a Solution


I first drew a free body diagram of particle one with the forces of particles 2 and 3. Their resultant force needs to balance exactly the force of particle 4 in order for the net force on particle 1 to be zero.

Forces 2 and 3 both equal kQq/a2 so their resultant is 2kQq/a2.

The distance between particle 1 and 4 i called c. a2+b2=c2. In this case a and b are both a(according to the diagram) so: a2+a2=c2. Thus c=a\sqrt{2}.

I used this to get the force of 4 on 1: kQ|-5.25Q|/a\sqrt{2}2, which when simplified becomes 5.25q2k/2a2.

In setting this equal to the resultant of forces 2 and 3, I end up with 5.25/4=1.31=q/Q. This is not coming up as the right answer.
 
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Check your resultant for forces 2 and 3. They form vector components and so should be added accordingly to find the magnitude of the resultant.
 
Okay wow, thanks! Hehe, totally forgot how to find the resultant of two vectors I guess. :P Good call, I got it now!
 
F2+F3=\sqrt{2}kQq/a2
 
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