72,927 views
22 votes
22 votes
Two charged objects attract each other with a force 1.0 N. What happens to the force between them if one charge is increased by a factor of 2, the other charge is increased by a factor of 4, and the separation distance between their centers is reduced to 1/4 its original value

User Andres Suarez
by
2.7k points

1 Answer

19 votes
19 votes

Answer:

F' = 128 N

Step-by-step explanation:

The electrostatic force of attraction between two charges is given by Colomb's Law, as follows:


F = (kq_1q_2)/(r^2)\\\\

where,

F = Force of attraction = 1 N

G = universal gravitational constant

q₁ = magnitude of the first charge

q₂ = magnitude of the second charge

r = distance between charges

Therefore,


1\ N = (kq_1q_2)/(r^2) --------------------- eq(1)

Now, we apply the changes given in the question:


F' = (k(2q_1)(4q_2))/(((1)/(4)r)^2)\\\\F' = 128((kq_1q_2)/(r^2))

using eq (1):

F' = 128(1 N)

F' = 128 N

User Billie
by
2.9k points