How Far Does a Charged Particle Travel Before Stopping?

AI Thread Summary
A charged particle with a mass of 2.50 x 10-3 kg and charge -3.00 x 10-6 C is fired towards a fixed charge of -4.00 x 10-6 C from a distance of 55.0 cm with an initial speed of 15.0 m/s. The discussion revolves around calculating how far the moving particle travels before it stops due to the electrostatic repulsion from the fixed charge. Key equations include the potential energy (PE) and kinetic energy (KE) formulas, which are used to relate the energies at the starting point and the stopping point. The participant attempts various calculations but struggles with the correct application of the potential energy formula. Ultimately, the focus is on equating the energies to find the distance traveled before the particle reverses direction.
lee_chick
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Sorry for the poor title - I'm not entirely sure how to describe the type of problem!

Homework Statement



A charge of -4.00 x 10-6 C is fixed in place. From a horizontal distance of 55.0cm a particle of mass 2.50 x 10-3 kg and charge -3.00 x 10-6 C is fired with an initial speed of 15.0m/s directly towards the fixed charge. How far does the particle travel before it stops and begins to return back?

Homework Equations



V = k(Q/r)

PE = (QV)/2

KE = (mv2)/2

The Attempt at a Solution



I've tried this a few times and haven't found anything that works so here is my latest attempt:

A__________________________B_______________________C
A = fixed charge
B = unknown distance
C = Starting point for moving charge

Qa = -4.00 x 10-6 C
Qc = -3.00 x 10-6 C
v0c = 15m/s
v1c = 0m/s
mc = 2.50 x 10-3 kg
rc = 0.55m
rb = ?

rb = k(Qa/Vc)
Vc = 2PE/Qc
PE = -KE
KE = (mv2)/2

KE = (2.50 x 10-3 kg x -15m/s)/2 = -0.009375
PE = 0.009375

Vc = 2(0.009375)/-3.00 x 10-6 C = -6.25 x 103

rb = 9 x 109 (-4.00 x 10-6 C/-6.25 x 103) = 5.76 m
 
Last edited:
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KE = 1/2*m*V^2
PE = k*Qa*Qc/rb
In this problem ra is not needed.
 
lee_chick said:

Homework Equations



V = k(Q/r)

PE = (QV)/2
Don't confuse the PE between two point charges with the energy stored in a capacitor. Look up the correct formula for PE.

KE = (mv2)/2
Good.

Hint: Compare the PE at point C with the PE at point B.
 
Thanks - I knew I was doing something wrong and just couldn't seem to sort out the problem correctly!
 
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