Subjects




Art



Business



Computers



English



Foreign Languages



Health



Home Economics



Mathematics



Music



Physical Education



Science



Social Studies







Features



Contribute



Download



Experts



Forum



Job Openings



Homework Tips



Libraries.Jiskha



Link to Us



Reference



School Supplies



Search







Homework Help Forum: physics
Current Questions | Post a New Question | Answer this Question | Further Reading

Posted by leesa on Friday, February 22, 2008 at 3:32pm.

a +35x10^-6 C point charge is placed 32 cm from an identical +32x10^-6 C charge. how much work would be required to move a +50.0x10^-6 C test charge from a point midway between them to a point 12 cm closer to either of the charges?
please show work and explain. i still don't understand what Damon said. we didn't learn how to solve it with integrals. is there another way

physics - Damon, Friday, February 22, 2008 at 4:03pm
q is each of our two charges
Q is our test charge
Left charge at x = 0
Right charge at x = .32 m
force due to left charge = k q Q/x^2
force due to right charge = -k q Q/(.32-x)^2
when x = .16, the middle, the sum of those two forces is zero. However as you move off center, the one nearer will push back harder. We move to x = .16+.12 = .28. At that point we are .32 -.28 = .04 from the right charge.
The integral of dr/r^2 = -1/r =-[1/Rend -1/Rbegin] = [1/Rbegin - 1/Rend]
Let's assume we move right (+x direction)
Work done against left charge (negative because it is pushing in the direction of motion so we are holding back) = - k q Q( 1/.16 -1/.28)
Work done against right charge = +k q Q(1/.04 -1/.16)