Nonuniformly Charged Semicircle

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The discussion revolves around calculating the acceleration of an electron placed at the center of a nonuniformly charged semicircular rod. The linear charge density is given by the equation λ = λ₀ * sin(θ), with λ₀ as a positive constant. Participants clarify the approach to finding the electric field at point P using Coulomb's Law and Newton's 2nd Law, emphasizing the need to consider small charge elements along the semicircle. The conversation highlights the importance of resolving forces into components and integrating over the semicircle to determine the total electric field. Ultimately, the user expresses gratitude for the guidance received in solving the problem.
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Homework Statement


A thin glass rod is a semicircle of radius R, see the figure. A charge is nonuniformly distributed along the rod with a linear charge density given by \lambda=\lambda_{0} + sin(\theta), where \lambda_{0} is a positive constant. Point P is at the center of the semicircle.

GIANCOLI.ch21.p50.jpg


Determine the acceleration (magnitude and direction) of an electron placed at point P, assuming R = 1.9 and \lambda_{0} = 2.0 \mu C/m.

Homework Equations


Coulomb's Law F_{e}=kq_{1}q_{2}/r^{2}
Electric Field Equation E=F_{e}/q
Newton's 2nd Law

The Attempt at a Solution


I attempted to use Newton's 2nd Law to solve this problem. I know the mass of an electron, and since gravity can be ignored, I knew that all I needed to do was to find the electric force on the electron to find the acceleration. I know the the force points straight up do to the positive charge above and the negative charge below, but I'm having trouble quanitfying the forces. I attempted to use Coulomb's Law by plugging in the charges for just one electron and proton, but I know that's not right. Please help!
(Also, let me know if the image disappears, it should work out fine though...)
 
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Welcome to PF!

Hi saxyliz ! Welcome to PF! :smile:

(have a theta: θ and a lambda: λ and a mu: µ :wink:)
saxyliz said:
A thin glass rod is a semicircle of radius R, see the figure. A charge is nonuniformly distributed along the rod with a linear charge density given by \lambda=\lambda_{0} + sin(\theta), where \lambda_{0} is a positive constant. Point P is at the center of the semicircle.

Determine the acceleration (magnitude and direction) of an electron placed at point P, assuming R = 1.9 and \lambda_{0} = 2.0 \mu C/m.

Are you sure it isn't λ = λ0 times sinθ (that seems more consistent with the image)? :confused:
 


tiny-tim said:
Hi saxyliz ! Welcome to PF! :smile:

(have a theta: θ and a lambda: λ and a mu: µ :wink:)


Are you sure it isn't λ = λ0 times sinθ (that seems more consistent with the image)? :confused:


Oh yes sorry! It's times! Silly me!
 
saxyliz said:
Oh yes sorry! It's times! Silly me!

:rolleyes: :smile:
saxyliz said:
I attempted to use Newton's 2nd Law to solve this problem. I know the mass of an electron, and since gravity can be ignored, I knew that all I needed to do was to find the electric force on the electron to find the acceleration. I know the the force points straight up do to the positive charge above and the negative charge below, but I'm having trouble quanitfying the forces. I attempted to use Coulomb's Law by plugging in the charges for just one electron and proton, but I know that's not right.

ok, then … yes, the force will point up, so you only need the up-components.

But you must slice the semicircle into bits of length dθ, and plug in the charge for that. :smile:
 
So, dq = \lambda d \theta? Then I plug that into Coulomb's Law to solve for dE, but how do I solve for the components?

To be more specific, what I get is:

dE=k\lambda d \theta /R^{2}

Which is the same as

dE=k\lambda_{0} sin(\theta) d \theta /R^{2}

Do I use a sector for the components? Like polar coordinates?
 
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Hi saxyliz! :smile:

(what happened to that θ and λ i gave you? :confused:)
saxyliz said:
So, dq = \lambda d \theta? Then I plug that into Coulomb's Law to solve for dE, but how do I solve for the components?

No, dq = λ sin θ dθ.

For components, you use cos of the angle as usual … what is worrying you about that? :confused:
 
Sorry! I'm totally new to this and didn't get what you meant in the first place (about the θ, etc.)

Why isn't it λ_0 ? Wouldn't it be sin^2 then?

I think I get what you mean about the components, give me a second.

EDIT:
I got it! Thanks so much for your help!
 
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