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point charge? (1 Viewer)

za

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'discuss qualitatively the elctric field strength due to a point charge, positive and negative charges and oppositely charged parallel plates'


can someone please tell me wat there asking here
do u just say that opposites attract and like charges repel?
how do u talk about point charges?
 

Xayma

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No things like on a point charge the electric field strength is inversley proportional to the distance.

To oppositely charged parallel plates between the plates the electric field strength is equal.

etc/
 

angelduck

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In my summary of it, i got:
- electric field of isolated point charge is indicated by radial straight lines
- evenly spaced and enter/leave surface at right angles
- intensity decreases with distance
- E=kq/d^2 where k=coulomb's constant
 

xiao1985

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should be the force experienced by a charged partcile in an electric field with a charge of q... uhm aprt from it should really be:

F = kq1q2/d^2
 

Xayma

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I think the constant is 2.0*10<sup>-7</sup> (amps/square metre I think)
 

CrashOveride

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havnt seen that before ..its not on the physics formulae sheet either nor can i recall it being in Jacaranda?
 

Rorix

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hay guys how come k isn't on the datasheet
:rolleyes:
 

Xayma

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It is. Last time I checked, of course it isnt called k its called some constant.
 

Constip8edSkunk

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its called electromagnetic constant on the data sheet if i remember correctly, its derived from the constant factor in the inverse relationship between the distance from a current carrying wire and the strength of the B field from that distance
 

zeropoint

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To clarify, E = KQ/d^2 describes the electric field strength at a distance d from a point charge Q. Here, K = 1/4*pi*e_0 where e_0 is the permittivity of free space. The numerical value of K is 8.98754 * 10^9.
 

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