What charge would have to be fixed at the origin?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the charge that must be fixed at the origin to make the tension in the rope zero, the equation T = mv0^2/L + qv0B0 is used. Setting T to zero leads to the equation 0 = (4kg)(5m/s)^2/(2m) + Q(5m/s)(1T). The calculation shows that the force exerted by the charge at the origin must equal the centripetal force required to maintain the ball's circular motion. The solution indicates that the charge Q must counterbalance the existing forces acting on the ball, which includes its mass and the magnetic field effects. Ultimately, the problem requires finding the specific charge Q that achieves this balance.
TRVSA
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Homework Statement


A ball of mass m is attached to a rope of length L which has one end at the origin; the ball moves in a horizontal circle at constant speed v0 on a frictionless plane; the velocity is always at 90◦ to the rope. The ball has a charge q, and moves in a constant magnetic field which is directed vertically B⃗ = B0kˆ. At the time illustrated, the ball is at location ⃗r = L cos θˆı + L sin θˆ, with velocity ⃗v = −v0 sin θˆı + v0 cos θˆ.

  1. Assume that q = 3.0[C], B0 = 1.0[T], v0 = 5.0[m/s], m = 4.0[kg], and L = 2.0[m], what charge would have to be fixed at the origin in order the tension in the rope became 0?

Homework Equations


T = mv0^2/L + qv0B0

The Attempt at a Solution



I set T to 0, plugged in the values given and tried to solve for q.
 
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TRVSA said:
I set T to 0, plugged in the values given and tried to solve for q.

Please explicitly show what you did and where you got stuck.
 
PeterDonis said:
Please explicitly show what you did and where you got stuck.

0 = (4kg)(5m/s)2/2(2.0m) + q(5m/s)(1T)
10 = q

which obviously is not the answer. that was just a shot in the dark. I know q is given as 3.0C.. I just do not know how to solve for the charge at the origin.
 
TRVSA said:
I know q is given as 3.0C..

That's the charge on the ball. You are not being asked to solve for that. You are being asked to find what charge ##Q## (note the capital letter to show that it's a different charge we're talking about) would have to be placed at the origin for the tension in the rope to be zero. In other words, the charge ##Q##, when placed at the origin, should exert the same force on the ball as the tension in the rope does when the charge ##Q## is not there.
 
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