What is the magnitude of the electric field?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the electric field at a specific point due to three point charges aligned along the x-axis. The electric field is determined using the equation E = kq/r^2, where the direction of the field is influenced by the nature of the charges: it points away from positive charges and towards negative ones. The horizontal component of the electric field from the negative charge (-4.19 nC) points in the negative x-direction, while the positive charge (2.51 nC) contributes to the positive x-direction. The vertical component is primarily influenced by the positive charge (5.41 nC) and the negative charge. The net electric field is calculated as the square root of the sum of the squares of the horizontal and vertical components, resulting in a magnitude of 7.88 N/C.
n_h0987
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Homework Statement


Three point charges, q1 = -4.19 nC, q2 = 5.41 nC and q3 = 2.51 nC are aligned along the x-axis as shown in the figure below.
[URL]http://imgur.com/RaRML[/URL]
Assume that L1 = 0.496 m and L2 = 0.816 m. Calculate the electric field at the position (0, 2.02).


Homework Equations



E = kq/r^2

The Attempt at a Solution



Horizontal electric field = Ex = k(-4.19*10^-9)cos76/2.08^2 + k(2.51*10^-9)cos68/2.18^2 = -0.3276 N/C

Vertical electric field = Ey = k(-4.19*10^-9)sin76/2.08^2 + k(5.41*10^-9)/2.02^2 + k(2.51*10^-9)sin68/2.18^2 = 7.88 N/C

Net field = square root of Ex^2 + Ey^2 = 7.88 N/C

Please help! :(
 
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n_h0987 said:

Homework Statement


Three point charges, q1 = -4.19 nC, q2 = 5.41 nC and q3 = 2.51 nC are aligned along the x-axis as shown in the figure below.
[URL]http://imgur.com/RaRML[/URL]
Assume that L1 = 0.496 m and L2 = 0.816 m. Calculate the electric field at the position (0, 2.02).


Homework Equations



E = kq/r^2
That equation gives the magnitude of the electric field, but not its direction. To tell what direction it points in, use the rule the E points away from positive charges or towards negative charges.

The Attempt at a Solution



Horizontal electric field = Ex = k(-4.19*10^-9)cos76/2.08^2 + k(2.51*10^-9)cos68/2.18^2 = -0.3276 N/C
You're close. Here are two questions for you:

In what direction does the horizontal part point due to the -4.19 nC charge? (Hint, E points towards this negative charge, therefore it's in the (+x, -x?) direction.)

In what direction does the the horizontal part point due to the +2.51 nC charge? (Hint, E points away from this positive charge, therefore it's in the (+x, -x?) direction.)

Vertical electric field = Ey = k(-4.19*10^-9)sin76/2.08^2 + k(5.41*10^-9)/2.02^2 + k(2.51*10^-9)sin68/2.18^2 = 7.88 N/C

Net field = square root of Ex^2 + Ey^2 = 7.88 N/C

Please help! :(
 
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Redbelly98 said:
In what direction does the horizontal part point due to the -4.19 nC charge? (Hint, E points towards this negative charge, therefore it's in the (+x, -x?) direction.)

In what direction does the the horizontal part point due to the +2.51 nC charge? (Hint, E points away from this positive charge, therefore it's in the (+x, -x?) direction.)

The components of the negative charge point in the opposite direction relative to the two positive charges, right? So the horizontal part of the negative charge points in the -x direction while that of the positive charge points in the +x direction. Isn't that accounted for with the negative sign in front of the 4.19 nC charge? So I ended up subtracting the magnitudes of the negative charge's components from those of the positive charges...is that not right?
 
So the horizontal part of the negative charge points in the -x direction while that of the positive charge points in the +x direction.
Since the point in question is to the left of the positive charge q3, and E points away from positive charges, then the horizontal component of E due to q3 points to the left, i.e. it's negative also.

If you still don't see that, label the point (0, 2.02) in the diagram. Then draw a vector pointing directly away from charge q3. In what direction is the horizontal component of this vector?
 
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