Consider an object having a charge Q. Some charge is removed from it and is placed on a second initially uncharged object until the electrostatic force between them is maximum. The two objects are placed 1.0 m apart. If the maximum possible electrostatic force between the objects is 170 N what should be the value of Q (in C). Provide your answer in 3 significant figures
Consider an object having a charge Q. Some charge is removed from it and is placed...
A q charge is taken from a +Q charge and placed 1 m away. What q charge will make the force between the two at a maximum
1.
a.) An object carries a charge of -6.1 µC, while
another carries a charge of -2.0 µC. How many electrons
must be transferred from the first to the second object so that
both objects have the same charge?
b.) Suppose a thin conducting wire connects two conducting
spheres. A negatively charged rod is brought near one of the
spheres, the wire between them is cut, and the charged rod is taken
away. Which one of the following is true?...
A charge Q is transferred from an initially uncharged plastic ball to an identical ball 15 cm away. The force of attraction is then 20 mN. Part A How many electrons were transferred from one ball to the other? Express your answer using two significant figures. O ASC A O O ? Submit Request Answer
Two small nonconducting spheres have a total charge of Q=Q1+Q2= 91.0 μC , Q1<Q2. When placed 28.0 cm apart, the force each exerts on the other is 13.0 N and is repulsive. What is the charge Q1? What is the charge Q2? What would Q1 be if the force were attractive? What would Q2 be if the force were attractive? Express your answer to three significant figures and include the appropriate units.
Consider a set of charges q, 2q, 3q, and 4q placed at the
vertices of a square whose edge has a length a.
a. Calculate the total electric potential energy, U, that is
required to assemble this arrangement of charges compared with
having the charges infinitely far apart.
b. Now imagine that a charge Q is moved from infinitely far away
to the centre of this square of charges. Would it be possible to
assemble all five charges—Q and the...
Two point charges, with charge magnitudes q and Q, are placed a distance r apart. In this arrangement, each point charge experiences a force of magnitude F. In the three scenarios, q. Q, and rare changed to some multiple of their original values. In each case, fill in the missing value on one of the variables that will result in a force between the point charges that is equal in magnitude to the original F. Original Answer Bank Scenario 1...
Problem 3 Two identical plastic spheres are initially uncharged. A charge Q is transferred from one sphere to the other sphere. When the two spheres are separated by 0.25m the attractive force between them is 15nN, How many electrons where transferred from one plastic ball to the other?
Do each question separately and show step by step
Two spherical objects are separated by a distance of 2.80 mm. The objects are initially electrically neutral and are very small compared to the distance between them. Each object acquires the same negative charge due to the addition of electrons, As a result, each object experiences an electrostatic force that has a magnitude of 1.44 times 10^-25 N. How many electrons did it take to produce the charge on one of...
Two identical spheres each having charge Q =-11 nC and mass mOF 10 milligrams are held fixed at their positions 5.0 cm apart. A particle with charge q-+1.0 nC and mass mo-0.40 milligrams is released from rest at a position 5.0 cm from each sphere (so initially the particle and the spheres form an equilateral triangle). Find the speed of the positively charged particle when it passes a point exactly in between the two spheres. (k - 9.0 x 109...
Problem 3 Two identical plastic spheres are initially uncharged. A charge Q is transferred from one sphere to the other sphere. When the two spheres are separated by 0.25m the attractive force between them is 15n N. How many electrons where transferred from one plastic ball to the other?