The Physics Problem Solver/Electromagnetism/Electric Charge and Coulomb's Law

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The scalar form of Coulomb's law is an expression for the magnitude and sign of the electrostatic force between two idealized point charges, small in size compared to their separation. This force (F) acting simultaneously on point charges (q1) and (q2), is given by

F=keq1q2r2

where r is the separation distance and ke is a proportionality constant. A positive force implies it is repulsive, while a negative force implies it is attractive. The proportionality constant ke, called the Coulomb constant (sometimes called the Coulomb force constant), is related to defined and can be calculated based on knowledge of empirical measurements of the speed of light:

ke=14πε0=c2 μ04π=8.987×109 Nm2/C2.

Exercises

Beginner

1) Two point charges are initially 9 cm apart and are then moved so they are 2 cm apart. If the initial force between them is F what is the new force in terms of the initial force?

Using F=keq1q2r2

For the initial state, r = 9cm = 0.09m

Fi=keq1q20.092

For the initial state, r = 2cm = 0.02m

Ff=keq1q20.022

Multiplying by r2 in both cases gives us:

Fi*0.092=keq1q2
Ff*0.022=keq1q2

Setting the two equations to be equal ( they are both equal to keq1q2):

Fi×0.092=Ff×0.022
Ff=0.0920.022×Fi=20.25Fi

In other words, the new force is roughly 20x as strong as the initial force.

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