Two point charges repelling, stretching a spring

AI Thread Summary
Two point charges of 40 mC each are attached to a spring with a spring constant of 120 Nm-1, and the problem is to find the spring's length at equilibrium. The initial approach involved equating the electrostatic force and the spring force, but confusion arose regarding whether the calculated distance was the change in length or the total length of the spring. After several attempts, the correct relationship was established using the equations for electrostatic and spring forces. The final calculated length of the spring when the charges are in equilibrium is approximately 0.569715 m. This solution clarifies the importance of correctly interpreting the variables in Hooke's law and the forces involved.
chopnhack
Messages
53
Reaction score
3

Homework Statement



Two spherical point charges each carrying a charge of 40 mC are attached to the two ends of a spring of length 20 cm. If its spring constant is 120 Nm-1, what is the length of the spring when the charges are in equilibrium?

Homework Equations


1) F = k*(q^2)/r^2 where k is the constant of proportionality
2) F = kx where k is the spring constant

The Attempt at a Solution


Both equations can be graphed and see where they intersect. I had some trouble getting my calculator to do that, so I set both equations equal to each other and then solved for x.
1) F = 14.4Nm^2/r^2
2) F = 120N/m * r

14.4Nm^2/r^2 = 120N/m * r

x = 0.493242m

Is the logic sound? If you try to solve for r, the forces do not equate.
Thanks in advance!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Remember that the spring is originally 20 cm.
 
  • Like
Likes chopnhack
person123 said:
Remember that the spring is originally 20 cm.
Yes, but they don't ask for the change in length but the final length. Unless I am missing something else you are hinting at?
 
chopnhack said:
Yes, but they don't ask for the change in length but the final length. Unless I am missing something else you are hinting at?
What does x stand for in the equation for the force of a spring?
 
person123 said:
What does x stand for in the equation for the force of a spring?
distance when stretched
 
chopnhack said:
distance when stretched
It's the change in length when stretched.
 
person123 said:
It's the change in length when stretched.
so the force of the spring when stretched 0.4932m * 120N/m = 59N
the force of the particles apart from each other at 0.4932m --> F = 14.4Nm^2/(0.24324) = 59N
 
chopnhack said:
so the force of the spring when stretched 0.4932m * 120N/m = 59N
the force of the particles apart from each other at 0.4932m --> F = 14.4Nm^2/(0.24324) = 59N
Is 0.4932 m the change in length or the new length?
 
person123 said:
Is 0.4932 m the change in length or the new length?
I took it to be the total new distance between the particles, hence the current length of the spring.
 
  • #10
chopnhack said:
I took it to be the total new distance between the particles, hence the current length of the spring.
And isn't x supposed to be the change in the length of the spring and not the new length of the spring?
 
  • #11
person123 said:
And isn't x supposed to be the change in the length of the spring and not the new length of the spring?
:sorry::H
that means that the force on the spring will only be 35N! 120n/m * deltaX. That means there is a problem with this approach. sigh...

My first approach at the problem was to equate the two directly together and the problem there was I got an answer of 3 meters that made no sense. As someone pointed out to me - check the value of force at 3m for each equation and you will see the problem. I did indeed see that the force at 3m for the particles was extremely small where as with the spring it was relatively high.

k = constant of proportionality

F = k ×(q1q2/r^2)

9x10^9 N×m2×C-2 × [(40μC^2)/0.2m^2]

F = 360Nk = spring constant = 120 N×m-1F = kx
360N = 120 N×m-1 × x
x = 3m

so then if we change the equation to:

14.4/x^2 = 120*(x-0.2)
x = 0.569715m
 
  • #12
chopnhack said:
9x10^9 N×m2×C-2 × [(40μC^2)/0.2m^2]
Why are you finding the original electrostatic force instead of the final?
 
  • #13
person123 said:
Why are you finding the original electrostatic force instead of the final?
In that particular attempt I thought I just needed to set the equation to each other to find their equivalency. But the two apparently weren't linear. The next attempt was only flawed in what you pointed out, the improper use of the x in hooke's law. Now that I corrected that I believe I go it. The values of force work out also.

14.4/x^2 = 120*(x-0.2)
x = 0.569715m
 
  • #14
My apologies. I agree with what you did and it matches up with my results so I think it should be correct.
 
  • #15
I appreciate your efforts to help me! Thanks mate :-)
 
Back
Top