Electric force is described by Coulomb's Law.
Similar to gravitational force where massive objects attract each other, charged particles exert forces on each other.
Positive Charges: Repulsive force (forces away from each other).
Negative Charges: Repulsive force (forces away from each other).
Mixed Charges (Positive and Negative): Attractive force (forces towards each other).
Newton's Third Law: The force exerted by charged particles is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, similar to gravitational forces.
The electric force between two charged particles, represented as q1 and q2, is given by:
Electric Force (F) = (1 / (4 * π * ε₀)) * (q1 * q2) / r² * r̂
where:
ε₀: permittivity of free space, approximately equal to 8.85 x 10^(-12) C²/N·m²
or 9 x 10^9 N·m²/C²
for calculations.
r: distance between the charges, and r̂ is the unit vector in the direction from one charge to the other.
Charge is measured in Coulombs (C).
Charge of a proton: +e = +1.6 x 10^(-19) C
Charge of an electron: -e = -1.6 x 10^(-19) C
Alpha Particle: Contains 2 protons and has a charge of +2e.
Example: Calculate the force on an alpha particle by a gold nucleus.
Suppose the alpha particle is at coordinates (-5, 3) and the gold nucleus at (1, 0):
Determine r vector: r = position of alpha particle - position of gold nucleus.
Calculate force using Coulomb's Law: Plug in values of charges and distance to find the force.
The direction of the force is based on the nature of the charges:
Forces due to like charges (both positive/negative) are in the direction of r (repulsion).
Forces due to unlike charges (one positive, one negative) are towards each other (attraction).
When calculating vector quantities in physics (such as forces), it is useful to compute an easier component, often the x-component.
Electric force magnitude depends on both interacting charges:
Greater charge on one particle results in greater force upon the other particle.
Example 1: Force on an alpha particle compared to a gold nucleus.
If comparing to a proton (with half the charge), the force on the proton is also half as strong compared to the alpha particle due to the lower charge.
Electric force like gravitational force follows an inverse square law:
Relationship: Doubling the distance decreases the force by a quarter (1/4).
Draw diagrams for understanding forces acting on a central body.
Factor in both the distance and charge interactions when calculating resultant forces.
For tests, focus calculations to the x-component of vectors to save time, unless circumstances require further calculation of y-components.