Two charges of -2 C and -3 C are positioned on a line at points 4 and -1 , respectively. What is the net force on a charge of 5 C at 0 ?

1 Answer
Nov 7, 2017

115/8k_eC^2 to the negative direction.

Explanation:

Electrostatic force between two point charges can be calculated using Coulomb's law.
F=k_e(q_1*q_2)/r^2, where k_e is the Coulomb's constant(k=8.99*10^9 Nm^2C^-2), q_1 and q_2 are the charges and r is the distance.

Force between -2C (at the point 4) and 5C (at the point 0) is
F_1=k_e(2C*5C)/4^2=5/8k_eC^2. The direction of F_1 is positive, for the two point charges have opposite signs.

Force between -3C (at the point -1) and 5C (at the point 0) is
F_2=k_e(3C*5C)/1^2=15k_eC^2. This is also an attractive force, so the direction is negative.

Therefore, the net force on a charge of 5C at 0 is 15k_eC^2-5/8k_eC^2=115/8k_eC^2, and its direction is negative.