Lecture01 Part 2 Coulombs Law
Lecture01 Part 2 Coulombs Law
Lecture01 Part 2 Coulombs Law
Electric Charge.
Just a reminder of some things you learned back in grade school.
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That’s all the lecture time I’ll devote to sections 21.1 and 21.2.
Lecture 1 agenda:
Electric Charge.
Just a reminder of some things you learned back in grade school.
q1q 2
F k 2
12 r12
*Moving charged particles also exert the Coulomb force on each other.
a note on starting equations
q1q 2
F k 2 is on your starting equation sheet.
12 r12
1 C2
Also, k where 0 8.85 10 12 .
4 0 Nm 2
r12
I just told you it’s OK to
+ - use Coulomb’s Law for
spherically-symmetric
charge distributions.
If more than two charges are involved, the net force is the vector
sum of all forces (superposition). For objects with complex
shapes, you must add up all the forces acting on each separate
charge (calculus!!).
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Example: a positive charge Q1 = +Q is located a distance d
along the y-axis from the origin. A second positive charge
Q2 = +Q is located at the origin and a negative charge Q3 = -2Q
is located on the x-axis a distance 2d away from Q1. Calculate
the net electrostatic force on Q1 due to the other two charges.