Triangle Electrostatics Problem

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the net electrostatic force on three positive charges located at the corners of an equilateral triangle. The initial calculation yielded a force of 11.0 N between two charges, but the expected net force is 19.0 N directed away from the center. Participants emphasize the importance of considering the contributions from both neighboring charges and resolving forces into their horizontal and vertical components for accurate addition. It is clarified that forces with the same sign add together rather than cancel out, and the angles in an equilateral triangle should be used to apply sine and cosine functions for component calculations. Understanding vector addition is crucial for solving the problem correctly.
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Homework Statement



Three positive particles of charges +7.0 uC are located at the corners of an equilateral triangle of side 20 cm. Calculate the magnitude and direction of the net force on each particle.

Answer: 19.0 N [AWAY FROM THE CENTRE]

Homework Equations



F = (kQ1Q2)/(r^2)

Where:

k is the Electrostatics Constant - 9 x 10^9 Nm^2/C^2
Q1 and Q2 are the charges in (C)
r is the separation in (m)
F is the Electrostatics Force in (N)

The Attempt at a Solution



Er, so I calculated the force on one of them from another, see below:

F = (kQ1Q2)/(r^2)
= [(9 x 10^9 Nm^2/C^2)(7.0 X 10^-6 C)(7.0 X 10^-6 C)]/(.20m)^2
= 11.0 N

And that's where I'm stuck: I have absolutely no idea how I would even obtain a number close to 19.0 N!

What I do understand is the direction: by [AWAY FROM THE CENTRE] they mean that because they are all positive charges, they will all repel away from one another- right? Do correct me if I'm wrong.

I really do appreciate it!
 
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You need to consider both charges influencing the third. Hint: you need to resolve the forces into their horizontal and vertical components and the horizontals are oppositely directed so cancel out.
 
Technically, all of the forces acting on the charge are opposite another- so by that logic, wouldn't they all cancel out?

I truly do not understand. :-(
 
No, if the forces have the same sign and are operating in the same direction they add.

You have studied vectors a bit, right? Forces are vectors and the best way to add them is to break the forces down into horizontal and vertical components? See my picture, the red and blue arrows are the components. Equilateral triangles have what angles? Use sin, cos functions to compute the components then add, paying attn to sign! There are two balls each effecting the third, so my picture isn't complete.

triangles.jpg




That help?
 
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