Question #82085

2 Answers
Nov 2, 2016

i46.tinypic
Let charges be q_1=+10muC, q_2=+8muC and q_3=+15muC be placed as shown in the figure above. All three vertex angles =60^@ and all sides a=10cm
Now according to Coulomb's Law
vecF_13 = k_e(q_1q_3)/r_13^ 2 hatr_13

Inserting given values we get
|vecF_13| = (9.0 xx 10^9)((10xx10^-6)(15xx10^-6))/(0.1)^2=135N

Similarly
vecF_23 = k_e(q_2q_3)/r_23^ 2 hat r_23
From the figure we see that hat r_23=hati
Inserting given values we get
|vecF_23| = (9.0 xx 10^9)((8xx10^-6)(15xx10^-6))/(0.1)^2=108N

From the figure it is clear that angle between the two unit vectors hatr_13 and hati is 60^@
As such the x and y components of vecF_13 can be written as
vecF_13=135cos60^@hati-135sin60^@hatj
vecF_13=67.5hati-116.9hatj
Total force is sum of two forces
vecF_13+vecF_23=67.5hati-116.9hatj+108hati
vecF_"total"=(175.5hati-116.9hatj)N

Nov 9, 2016

sf(211color(white)(x)N) at an angle of sf(56^@) to the vertical.

Explanation:

I will suggest two methods you could use which involves finding the resultant of the two forces acting on the charge.

Here is the situation:

MFDocs

sf(q_1=+10muC)

sf(q_2=+8muC)

sf(q_3=+15muC)

Method (1)

Here is the vector diagram showing the forces acting on sf(q_3):

MFDocs

There is a horizontal force sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(23)). There is a force sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(13)) at an angle of sf(60^@) to the horizontal.

These are indicated by the red arrows. We need to get the resultant R.

Coulombs Law gives us the force of attraction between sf(q_2) and sf(q_3):

sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(23))=(kq_2q_3)/(r_(23)^2).hatr)

sf(k) is a constant with the value sf(9xx10^(9)" "N.m^(2).C^(-2))

:.sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(23))=(kxx8xx10^(-6)xx15xx10^(-6))/(0.1^2)=120kxx10^(-10)" "N)

By the same reasoning:

sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(13))=(kxx10xx10^(-6)xx15xx10^(-6))/(0.1^2)=150kxx10^(-10)" "N)

To make the numbers easier to handle I will normalise the forces in units of sf(K) where sf(K=kxx10^(-10)" "N)

Now we have a Side Angle Side triangle. We know 2 sides and the angle between them so we can apply the cosine rule to find the unknown side.

For a triangle abc this gives us:

sf(a^2=b^2+c^2-"2bc"CosA)

Applying this to the vector diagram we get:

sf(R^2=150^2+120^2-(2xx150xx120xxcos120)

sf(R^(2)=22500+14400-(-18000))

sf(R^2=54900)

sf(R=sqrt(54900)=234.3" "K) units

Re-scaling:

sf(R=234.3xx9xx10^9xx10^(-10)=color(red)(211)" "N)

To find the angle sf(theta) we can apply the sine rule:

sf(234/sin120=120/sintheta)

:.sf(sintheta=0.444)

From which:

sf(theta=26.3^@)

From the diagram you can see that resultant R must be at an angle of sf(30^@+26.3^@=56.3^@) to the vertical.

Method (2)

We can resolve the forces into their horizontal and vertical components and find the resultant from that.

Horizontal components:

The horizontal component of sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(13))=sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(13))cos60)=stackrel(rarr)(F_(13))xx0.5)

So the total horizontal component is given by:

sf(F_x=stackrel(rarr)(F_(23))+0.5xxstackrel(rarr)(F_(13)))

sf(F_x=120K+0.5x150K=195K)

Vertical components:

sf(stackrel(rarr)(F_(23)) does not have a vertical component so:

sf(F_(y)=stackrel(rarr)(F_(13))cos30=150Kxx0.866=129.9K)

Now we can apply Pythagoras:

MFDocs

sf((129.9K)^2+(195K)^2=R^2)

sf(R^(2)=54899K^(2))

sf(R=234.3K" "N)

sf(R=234.3xx9xx10^(9)xx10^(-10)=color(red)211" "N)

To find the angle alpha to the vertical:

sf(Tanalpha=195/129.9=1.5)

From which:

alpha=56.3^@

So the 2 methods are in agreement.