Chapter 21: Problem 21
Rubbing a balloon causes it to become negatively charged. The balloon then tends to cling to the wall of a room. For this to happen, must the wall be positively charged?
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Chapter 21: Problem 21
Rubbing a balloon causes it to become negatively charged. The balloon then tends to cling to the wall of a room. For this to happen, must the wall be positively charged?
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Another unit of charge is the electrostatic unit (esu). It is defined as follows: Two point charges, each of 1 esu and separated by \(1 \mathrm{~cm}\), exert a force of exactly 1 dyne on each other: 1 dyne \(=1 \mathrm{~g} \mathrm{~cm} / \mathrm{s}^{2}=1 \cdot 10^{-5} \mathrm{~N}\). a) Determine the relationship between the esu and the coulomb. b) Determine the relationship between the esu and the elementarv charoe
Two charged spheres are \(8 \mathrm{~cm}\) apart. They are moved closer to each other enough that the force on each of them increases four times. How far apart are they now?
A particle (charge \(=+19.0 \mu C)\) is located on the \(x\) -axis at \(x=-10.0 \mathrm{~cm},\) and a second particle (charge \(=-57.0 \mu \mathrm{C})\) is placed on the \(x\) -axis at \(x=+20.0 \mathrm{~cm} .\) What is the magnitude of the total electrostatic force on a third particle (charge = \(-3.80 \mu \mathrm{C})\) placed at the origin \((x=0) ?\)
Find the net force on a \(2.0-C\) charge at the origin of an \(x y\) -coordinate system if there is a \(+5.0-C\) charge at \((3 \mathrm{~m}, 0)\) and \(a-3.0-C\) charge at \((0,4 \mathrm{~m})\)
Two identically charged particles separated by a distance of \(1.00 \mathrm{~m}\) repel each other with a force of \(1.00 \mathrm{~N}\). What is the magnitude of the charges?
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