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25 July, 12:53

Two identical, small spheres of mass 2.00 g are fastened to the ends of a 0.600 m

long light, flexible, insulating string. The string is suspended by a hook in the ceiling at

its exact centre. The spheres are each given an identical electric charge. They are in

static equilibrium, with an angle of 30.0° between the strings, as shown. Calculate the

magnitude of the charge on each sphere.

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Answers (1)
  1. 25 July, 13:17
    0
    1.19*10⁻⁷ C

    Explanation:

    Draw a free body diagram. Each sphere has three forces acting on it: weight downwards, tension along the string, and electrostatic force horizontally.

    Sum of the forces in the y direction:

    ∑F = ma

    T cos 15° - mg = 0

    T = mg / cos 15°

    Sum of the forces in the x direction:

    ∑F = ma

    T sin 15° - k q² / r² = 0

    Substituting and solving for q:

    mg tan 15° - k q² / r² = 0

    k q² / r² = mg tan 15°

    q = r √ (mg tan 15° / k)

    r, the distance between the spheres, is:

    sin 15° = (r/2) / (L/2)

    sin 15° = r / L

    r = L sin 15°

    Given L = 0.600 m, m = 2.00*10⁻³ kg, g = 9.81 m/s², and k = 9*10⁹ Nm²/C²:

    q = (0.600 sin 15°) √ (2.00*10⁻³ * 9.81 * tan 15° / (9*10⁹))

    q = 1.19*10⁻⁷ C
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