What is the Charge on Two Suspended Pith Balls with Coulomb's Law and Tension?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the charge on two suspended pith balls using Coulomb's Law and tension. The problem involves two pith balls of equal mass, suspended at an angle, and requires understanding the forces acting on them. Participants discuss the importance of drawing free-body diagrams and using trigonometric relationships to relate the forces. The final calculations lead to a charge of approximately 2.9 μC, but caution is advised regarding the total distance between the balls. The conversation emphasizes the need for careful algebraic manipulation and proper application of physical principles.
dancer2012
Messages
6
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



Two small pith balls, each of mass m = 12 g, are suspended by 1.2 m fine (so that we can neglect their mass in this problem) strings and are not moving. If the angle that each string makes with the vertical is θ = 42.6°, and the charges on the two balls are equal, what is that charge (in μC)?

Homework Equations



F(T)+F(g)+F(E)=0
F(Ty)=F(g)=mg
F(Tx)=k(q^2/r^2)

The Attempt at a Solution



I really don't know how to manipulate these formulas to find an answer. I know you find F(Ty) first, but then I don't know how to get F(Tx). I think I am missing a formula somewhere. Please Help Thank you
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You're pretty close, but the problem has an additional piece of information that you haven't used yet. Hint: it's the angle!
 
Probably best to draw free-body diagrams first perhaps?
Hi Dancer, welcome to PF.
 
The force diagram is attached


F(Ty)=cos(θ)*F(T) - - - F(T)=F(Ty)/cos(θ)
F(Tx)=sin(θ)*F(T) - - - F(T)=F(Tx)/sin(θ)

So, F(Ty)/cos(θ)=F(Tx)/sin(θ) - - - F(Tx)=[F(Ty)*sin(θ)]/cos(θ) - - - F(Tx)=F(Ty)*tan(θ)

Did I do all of that correctly?
 
Sorry here is the force diagram actually
 

Attachments

  • Force Diagram.jpg
    Force Diagram.jpg
    9.2 KB · Views: 507
The next step after drawing the diagram is to add up the forces in each direction. Start with just the left-hand ball. eg. F_T\cos\theta=F_g... do the horizontal one, then write out what each of the forces actually are. eg. F_e=\frac{kq^2}{r^2}... and r is related to the angle... see?
 
I understand that
 
Yeah, that's right. tanØ=Tx/Ty

So you're set, work out the algebra from here. Don't forget, as Simon mentioned, to get the EM force in terms of "x distance."
 
F(Tx)=mg*tan(θ)

q=√((F(Tx)*r^2)/k)

would r be mg/tan(θ)??
 
  • #10
Complete:
if the pith balls were at positions (±x,-y) ...
then there is a triangle l:y:x with angle θ between l and y (l=length of the string)
From this picture:

the distance between the balls is ____________.

and tanθ=_x/y_, sinθ=_____, and cosθ=_____.

which of the three is likely to help you?
 
Last edited:
  • #11
dancer2012 said:
F(Tx)=mg*tan(θ)

q=√((F(Tx)*r^2)/k)

would r be mg/tan(θ)??

Nah, that would be the horizontal force, which is the coulomb force you're in part trying to solve for. You've a string length you haven't used yet. ;)
 
  • #12
Ok so sin(θ)*string length=r

SO..
F(Ty)=F(g)=mg
F(Tx)=k(q^2/r^2)
F(Tx)=F(Ty)*tan(θ)
q=√((F(Tx)*r^2)/k)

F(Tx)=mg*tan(θ) - - - - - - - - - F(Tx)=.012kg*9.81m/s^2=.11772N→A
q=√((F(Tx)*(sin(θ)*L)^2)/k)----q=√(A*(sin(42.6)*1.2)^2/9E9)=2.938E-6C or 2.9μC

Is 2.9 μC the correct answer or did I make a mistake?
 
  • #13
Careful, you want the total distance between the pith balls. You just found one half, one leg.
 
Back
Top