Net Force on Outside Balls in a Charged System

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the net force on the outside balls in a system of three charged metal balls. The middle ball is positively charged, while the two outside balls are negatively charged, each with a charge of 1.47 microCoulombs. The attractive force between the middle ball and an outside ball is calculated to be 1.945 N, while the repulsive force between the two outside balls is 0.486 N. To find the net force on an outside ball, the forces must be combined vectorially, leading to a net force of approximately 1.459 N. The confusion arises from understanding the direction and magnitude of the forces acting on each ball.
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Homework Statement



Three tiny charged metal balls are arranged on a straight line. The middle ball is positively charged and the two outside balls are negatively charged. The two outside balls are separated by 20 cm and the middle ball is exactly halfway in between. The absolute value of the charge on each ball is the same, 1.47 microCoulombs.

What is the magnitude of the net foce on either outside ball?


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


After converting micocoulombs to C and cm to m, I used F=k(q1*q2/d^2) to find the magnitude of the attractive force on the outside ball by the inside ball, which is 1.945 N. I also found the magnitude of the resulsive force on the outside ball by the other outside ball, which is .486 N.

Now I'm just confused on how to get the net force. I know I need to understand the direction the forces are going in order to know how to combine the forces I found earlier.. and well...

A (-) ------ B (+) -------C (-) I know the force on B by C is pushing C away ----> and the same for the force on B by A except in the opposite direction <-------. other than this, this is where I get stuck.



Please, and thanks for the help!
 
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A is attracted by B by a 1.945N ---->
A is repulsed by B by 0.486N <--
The net force is F=Fb-Fc or F=Fc-Fb (all F's are vectors)

Same for C
 
basically it's 1.945 N - .486 N = 1.459 N (net force)?

Regarding your point that "A is repulsed by B by 0.486N <--", even though .486 N is the force that A is being repulsed by C, that force that A is repulsed by B is the same?.. Sorry I'm so confused it just seems like the repulsive force of A by B would be half of that of A by C because it's half the distance.
 
Yeah that was A is repulsed by C ... my bad.
 
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