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#1 2008-03-19 03:04:07

Seung
New Member
Registered: 2008-03-19
Posts: 2

Electric Potential Due to Point Charges

Having trouble solving one problem for homework and none of my friends seemed to get the right answer.

The question is:

"A +30-µC charge is placed 32 cm from an identical +30-µC charge. How much work would be required to move a +0.50-µC test charge from a point midway between them to a point 10 cm closer to either of the charges?"

The answer I got was like: LaTeX Image by using the equation:

LaTeX Image.

The answer in the back of the book was: 1.08J.


Any help is deeply appreciated and thanks in advance. big_smile

--Seung

Last edited by Seung (2008-03-20 03:33:55)

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#2 2008-03-19 20:49:58

Chris
Assistant Professor
From: Longwood University
Registered: 2004-09-30
Posts: 740
Website

Re: Electric Potential Due to Point Charges

I have no idea what this problem is talking about!

from a point midway between them to a point 0 cm closer to either of the charges?

If you move the test charge 0 cm closer to either, then you haven't moved the test charge at all. The answer would be zero.

If they mean that you move the test charge within 0 cm of one of the charges then the difference in potential would be infinite!


Chemists are physicists who don't do math. smile

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#3 2008-03-20 03:32:57

Seung
New Member
Registered: 2008-03-19
Posts: 2

Re: Electric Potential Due to Point Charges

I am so, so sorry. I meant to say that the test charge would move to a point 10 cm closer to either of them. I should have looked over my post for any errors. >.< I believe I fixed it above.

EDIT: Also, thank you Chris for pointing it out. ^-^

Last edited by Seung (2008-03-20 03:47:09)

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#4 2008-03-20 17:44:18

Chris
Assistant Professor
From: Longwood University
Registered: 2004-09-30
Posts: 740
Website

Re: Electric Potential Due to Point Charges

That makes much more sense!

I get the same answer as the back of your book: 1.08 J.

Instead of jumping straight to the work, think about the difference in potential energy between the two points. Determine the electric potential at the first point:

LaTeX Image

where Q is the charge of the large charges. The electric potential for some point displaced by some value d is:

LaTeX Image

The difference in potential LaTeX Image is just LaTeX Image. The work will just be this value times the test charge.


Chemists are physicists who don't do math. smile

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