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A small charged bead has a mass of 3.6 g. It is held in a uniform electric field E = (200,000 N/C, up). When the bead is released, it accelerates upward with an acceleration of 24 m/s^2. What is the charge on the bead?

User Slobo
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1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

The charge on the bead is
q = 6.084 *10^(-7)\ C

Step-by-step explanation:

From the question we are told that

The mass of the bead is
m = 3.6 \ g = 0.0036 \ kg

The magnitude of the electric field is
E = 200,000 \ N/C

The acceleration of the bead is
a = 24 m/s^2

Generally, the electric force on the bead is mathematically represented as


F_ e = q E

Where q is the charge on the bead

Now the gravitational force opposing the upward movement of the bead is mathematically represented as


F_g = mg

Generally the net force on the bead is mathematically represented as


F = F_e - F_g = m* a

=>
qE - mg = ma

Now substituting values


q * 200000 - 0.0036 *9.8 = 0.0036 * 24


q = 6.084 *10^(-7)\ C

User Hbf
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