What is the force between two point charges when they are touching?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the implications of the inverse square law in physics, particularly regarding point charges and the behavior of forces at very small distances. When two point charges are considered to be at zero distance, the force calculation leads to an undefined scenario due to division by zero, which raises questions about the nature of force in such cases. Classical physics indicates that the electrostatic field diverges to infinity at point charges, while quantum physics suggests that the vacuum is not empty, which mitigates this issue. The uncertainty principle prevents two charges from occupying the same space, ensuring that the force remains finite at small, non-zero distances. The conversation also touches on the relationship between the forces acting on an electron in a hydrogen atom and the absolute electric charges of the proton and electron.
joeyjo100
Messages
23
Reaction score
1
We all know the equations for inverse square laws, such as force between two masses or between two charged particles. We were told the force is inversely propotional to the distance between the masses or charges, squared.

But what would the force equal if the distance between, say two point charges, was zero ie they are touching. Common sense says there would be no force, as neither will move, but this situation would mean that the force would equal the product of the two charges divided by zero squared. As far as my limited maths knowledge stretches, dividing by zero leads to an undefined number.

What does this then say about the force? Would it eqaul zero as you might expect? Or would it be undefined?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Point charges are imaginary. Two charged objects with real mass cannot occupy the same space, although they could be "touching" each other, with a finite distance between their center of mass and charge.
 
As the two charges are brought closer together, the electrostatic force between them becomes larger and larger. For hypothetical, classical point charges, it would be impossible to exert enough force to actually make them occupy the same point -- the required force would be infinite.
 
The inverse square law is a product of using Gauss' law in a 3-dimensional space. At/inside the surface of the object of mass or charge a new formula has to be derived. For spherically symmetric objects of ~uniform density (such as an ideal planet for example) the new field equation becomes linear.
 
Does this keep the force from becoming infinite at small distances? On the scale of atomic particles i mean.
 
No, because elementary charge carriers are still point-particles as far as we can tell. In pure classical physics, electrostatic field diverges to infinity at point charge, and that's just the way it is. In quantum physics, fact that vacuum is not just empty space mostly takes care of that.
 
K^2 said:
No, because elementary charge carriers are still point-particles as far as we can tell. In pure classical physics, electrostatic field diverges to infinity at point charge, and that's just the way it is. In quantum physics, fact that vacuum is not just empty space mostly takes care of that.

What do you mean by the vacuum not being empy space?

Also, if you compare the strength of the attraction of an electron orbiting a proton, the hydrogen atom, is that attraction more or less than the two absolute electric charges of the proton and the electron? I guess I'm asking at what distance from a particle is their charge measured as it is?
 
Drakkith said:
Does this keep the force from becoming infinite at small distances? On the scale of atomic particles i mean.
At a small but nonzero distance, the force is not infinite; just a lot larger than it is at larger distances.

As for the distance equaling zero, the uncertainty principle forbids two charges from having exactly the same location.

Drakkith said:
Also, if you compare the strength of the attraction of an electron orbiting a proton, the hydrogen atom, is that attraction more or less than the two absolute electric charges of the proton and the electron?
This question does not make a whole lot of sense. You can't ask if a force is greater than or less than a charge -- that's like asking if an inch is smaller than an ounce.

The charges on the proton and the electron are always the same value, if that helps.
I guess I'm asking at what distance from a particle is their charge measured as it is?
I don't understand.
 
Last edited:
Alright, let me put it a better way. Given the electric charge of the proton and electron, what is the force between the two at a distance equal to the average distance of an electron around a proton in a Hydrogen atom?
 
Back
Top