- #1
henrybrent
- 57
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User informed about mandatory use of the homework template.
Two electric charges q1 = 2 microC and q2 = -2 microC are located at [itex]\vec{r_1}=(1,0,0)m[/itex] and [itex]\vec{r_2}=(0,0,-1)m[/itex] respectively. Calculate the force on q1 in vector form. [itex] \vec{F_{12}} = \frac {1}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\frac{q_1q_2}{|\vec{r_1}-\vec{r_2}|^3}(\vec{r_1}-\vec{r_2}) [/itex]
is the formula I am using.
I get an answer of (-0.013, 0, -0.013)N but I don't think this is correct and I have no idea where I messed up.
any ideas? ( I have no numerical solutions to the questions)
Calculate the electric dipole moment of this system (vector form)
I have used P = qD
q = 2x10^-6
d = (1,0,1) which I obtained from using r1-r2
So I just get the charge again multiplied by the vector
Don't think this is correct either.
Calculate the electric fluxes through two spherical Gaussian surfaces centred at the origin with radii R1=0.5m and R2=10m respectively
Now this is confusing. The first sphere doesn't enclose any charge, so q_enclosed is just 0? And the 10m sphere encloses both, but when you find the total charge enclosed, it's 2+ (-2) = 0? so again 0?
Any help appreciated
is the formula I am using.
I get an answer of (-0.013, 0, -0.013)N but I don't think this is correct and I have no idea where I messed up.
any ideas? ( I have no numerical solutions to the questions)
Calculate the electric dipole moment of this system (vector form)
I have used P = qD
q = 2x10^-6
d = (1,0,1) which I obtained from using r1-r2
So I just get the charge again multiplied by the vector
Don't think this is correct either.
Calculate the electric fluxes through two spherical Gaussian surfaces centred at the origin with radii R1=0.5m and R2=10m respectively
Now this is confusing. The first sphere doesn't enclose any charge, so q_enclosed is just 0? And the 10m sphere encloses both, but when you find the total charge enclosed, it's 2+ (-2) = 0? so again 0?
Any help appreciated