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What is the equation for calculating the electrical force, Fe, between two charges?

User Auselen
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2 Answers

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Answer is in the attachment and no there is no explanation for why physics is what it is

What is the equation for calculating the electrical force, Fe, between two charges-example-1
User Razvang
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2 votes

Answer:


F_e = (1)/(4 \pi \epsilon_0) (q_1 q_2)/(r^2)

Step-by-step explanation:

The electrostatic force (also called Couloumb force) between two electrical charge is given by the following formula:


F_e = (1)/(4 \pi \epsilon_0) (q_1 q_2)/(r^2)

where:


\epsilon_0=8.85\cdot 10^(-12) Fm^(-1) is the vacuum permittivity


q_1 is the magnitude of the first charge


q_2 is the magnitude of the second charge


r is the distance between the two charges

This formula gives only the magnitude of the force. The direction depends on the relative sign of the two charges:

- If the two charges have same sign, the force is repulsive (this corresponds to a positive sign in the formula)

- If the two charges have opposite sign, the force is attractive (this corresponds to a negative sign in the formula)


User Stomp
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