Title: The magnitude of the force
 1The magnitude of the force 
Two equal charges Q are placed a certain distance 
apart. They exert equal-and-opposite forces F on 
one another. Now one of the charges is doubled in 
magnitude to 2Q. What happens to the magnitude of 
the force each charge experiences? 1. Both 
charges experience forces of magnitude 2F. 2. 
The Q charge experiences a force of 2F the 2Q 
charge experiences a force F. 3. The Q charge 
experiences a force of F the 2Q charge 
experiences a force 2F. 4. None of the above. 
 2The magnitude of the force
- Lets examine this question from two 
perspectives.  - Newtons Third Law  can one object experience a 
larger force than the other?  -  
 - 2. Coulombs Law  if we double one charge, what 
happens to the force?  
  3The magnitude of the force
- Lets examine this question from two 
perspectives.  - Newtons Third Law  can one object experience a 
larger force than the other?  - No  the objects experience equal-and-opposite 
forces.  - 2. Coulombs Law  if we double one charge, what 
happens to the force?  
  4Superposition
- If an object experiences multiple forces, we can 
use  - The principle of superposition - the net force 
acting on an object is the vector sum of the 
individual forces acting on that object. 
  5Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a mass 4m, is placed on the x-axis 
at x  0. Ball B, which has a mass m, is placed 
on the x-axis at x  4a. Where would you place 
ball C, which also has a mass m, so that ball A 
feels no net force because of the other balls? Is 
this even possible? 
  6Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a mass 4m, is placed on the x-axis 
at x  0. Ball B, which has a mass m, is placed 
on the x-axis at x  4a. Where would you place 
ball C, which also has a mass m, so that ball A 
feels no net force because of the other balls? Is 
this even possible? 
  7Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a mass 4m, is placed on the x-axis 
at x  0. Ball B, which has a mass m, is placed 
on the x-axis at x  4a. Could you re-position 
ball C, which also has a mass m, so that ball B 
feels no net force because of the other balls?  
  8Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a mass 4m, is placed on the x-axis 
at x  0. Ball B, which has a mass m, is placed 
on the x-axis at x  4a. Could you re-position 
ball C, which also has a mass m, so that ball B 
feels no net force because of the other balls?  
  9Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Where would 
you place ball C, which has a charge of magnitude 
q, and could be positive or negative, so that 
ball A feels no net force because of the other 
balls?  
  10Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Where would 
you place ball C, which has a charge of magnitude 
q, and could be positive or negative, so that 
ball A feels no net force because of the other 
balls?  
  11Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Where would 
you place ball C, which has a charge of magnitude 
q, and could be positive or negative, so that 
ball A feels no net force because of the other 
balls?  
  12Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Could you 
re-position ball C, which has a charge of 
magnitude q, and could be positive or negative, 
so that ball B is the one feeling no net force? 
  13Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Could you 
re-position ball C, which has a charge of 
magnitude q, and could be positive or negative, 
so that ball B is the one feeling no net force? 
  14Worksheet  a one-dimensional situation
- Ball A, with a charge 4q, is placed on the 
x-axis at x  0. Ball B, which has a charge q, 
is placed on the x-axis at x  4a. Could you 
re-position ball C, which has a charge of 
magnitude q, and could be positive or negative, 
so that ball B is the one feeling no net force? 
  15A two-dimensional situation
- Simulation 
 - Case 1 There is an object with a charge of Q at 
the center of a square. Can you place a charged 
object at each corner of the square so the net 
force acting on the charge in the center is 
directed toward the top right corner of the 
square? Each charge has a magnitude of Q, but you 
get to choose whether it is  or  .  
  16Case 1  let me count the ways. 
There is an object with a charge of Q at the 
center of a square. Can you place a charged 
object at each corner of the square so the net 
force acting on the charge in the center is 
directed toward the top right corner of the 
square? Each charge has a magnitude of Q, but you 
get to choose whether it is  or  . How many 
possible configurations can you come up with that 
will produce the required force? 1. 1 2. 2 
 3. 3 4. 4 5. either 0 or more than 4 
 17A two-dimensional situation
- Simulation 
 - Case 2 The net force on the positive center 
charge is straight down. What are the signs of 
the equal-magnitude charges occupying each 
corner? How many possible configurations can you 
come up with that will produce the desired force? 
  
  18Case 2  let me count the ways. 
There is an object with a charge of Q at the 
center of a square. Can you place a charged 
object at each corner of the square so the net 
force acting on the charge in the center is 
directed straight down? Each charge has a 
magnitude of Q, but you get to choose whether it 
is  or  . How many possible configurations can 
you come up with that will produce the required 
force? 1. 1 2. 2 3. 3 4. 4 5. either 0 
or more than 4 
 19A two-dimensional situation
- Simulation 
 - Case 3 There is no net net force on the positive 
charge in the center. What are the signs of the 
equal-magnitude charges occupying each corner? 
How many possible configurations can you come up 
with that will produce no net force?  
  20Case 3  let me count the ways. 
There is an object with a charge of Q at the 
center of a square. Can you place a charged 
object at each corner of the square so there is 
no net force acting on the charge in the center? 
Each charge has a magnitude of Q, but you get to 
choose whether it is  or  . How many possible 
configurations can you come up with that will 
produce no net force? 1. 1 2. 2 3. 3 4. 4 
 5. either 0 or more than 4 
 21Worksheet a 1-dimensional example
- Three charges are equally spaced along a line. 
The distance between neighboring charges is a. 
From left to right, the charges are  - q1  Q q2  Q q3  Q 
 - What is the magnitude of the force experienced by 
q2, the charge in the center?  - Simulation
 
  22Worksheet a 1-dimensional example
- Let's define positive to the right. 
 - The net force on q2 is the vector sum of the 
forces from q1 and q3.  - The force has a magnitude of and 
points to the left.  - Handling the signs correctly is critical. The 
negative signs come from the direction of each of 
the forces (both to the left), not from the signs 
of the charges. I generally drop the signs in the 
equation and get any signs off the diagram by 
drawing in the forces.  
  23Ranking based on net force 
- Rank the charges according to the magnitude of 
the net force they experience, from largest to 
smallest.  - 1. 1  2 gt 3 
 - 2. 1 gt 2 gt 3 
 - 3. 2 gt 1  3 
 - 4. 2 gt 1 gt 3 
 - 5. None of the above. 
 
  24Ranking based on net force
- Will charges 1 and 3 experience forces of the 
same magnitude?  - Will charges 1 and 2 experience forces of the 
same magnitude (both have two forces acting in 
the same direction)?  
  25Ranking based on net force
- Will charges 1 and 3 experience forces of the 
same magnitude?  - No, because both forces acting on charge 1 are in 
the same direction, while the two forces acting 
on charge 3 are in opposite directions. Thus, 1 gt 
3.  - Will charges 1 and 2 experience forces of the 
same magnitude (both have two forces acting in 
the same direction)?  
  26Ranking based on net force
- Will charges 1 and 3 experience forces of the 
same magnitude?  - No, because both forces acting on charge 1 are in 
the same direction, while the two forces acting 
on charge 3 are in opposite directions. Thus, 1 gt 
3.  - Will charges 1 and 2 experience forces of the 
same magnitude (both have two forces acting in 
the same direction)?  - No, because one force acting on charge 1 is the 
same magnitude as one acing on charge 2, while 
the second force acting on charge 1 is smaller  
it comes from a charge farther away. Thus, 2 gt 1.  
  27Ranking based on net force
- We can calculate the net force, too. 
 - If we add these forces up, what do we get? Is 
that a fluke?  
  28Three charges in a line 
-  
 - Ball 1 has an unknown charge and sign. Ball 2 is 
positive, with a charge of Q. Ball 3 has an 
unknown non-zero charge and sign.  - Ball 3 is in equilibrium - it feels no net 
electrostatic force due to the other two balls.  - What is the sign of the charge on ball 1? 
 - 1. Positive 
 - 2. Negative 
 - 3. We can't tell unless we know the sign of the 
charge on ball 3.  
  29Three charges in a line
- Ball 3 is in equilibrium because it experiences 
equal-and-opposite forces from the other two 
balls, so ball 1 must have a negative charge. 
Flipping the sign of the charge on ball 3 
reverses both these forces, so they still cancel.  
  30Three charges in a line
- What is the magnitude of the charge on ball 1? 
Can we even tell if we dont know what Q3 is? 
  31Three charges in a line
- What is the magnitude of the charge on ball 1? 
Can we even tell if we dont know what Q3 is?  - Yes, we can! For the two forces to be 
equal-and-opposite, with ball 1 three times as 
far from ball 3 as ball 2 is, and the distance 
being squared in the force equation, the charge 
on ball 1 must have a magnitude of 9Q. 
  32Three charges in a line
- Lets do the math. Define to the right as 
positive.  
  33Two charges in a line
- The neat thing here is that we don't need to know 
anything about ball 3. We can put whatever charge 
we like at the location of ball 3 and it will 
feel no net force because of balls 1 and 2.  - Ball 3 isn't special - it's the location that's 
special. So, let's get rid of ball 3 from the 
picture and think about how the two charged balls 
influence the point where ball 3 was.  
  34Two charges in a line
- Ball 2's effect on ball 3 is given by Coulomb's 
Law  -  
 - Ball 2's effect on the point where ball 3 was is 
given by  - Electric Field    
 - The electric field from ball 1 and the electric 
field from ball 2 cancel out at the location 
where ball 3 was.  
  35Electric field
- A field is something that has a magnitude and a 
direction at every point in space. An example is 
a gravitational field, symbolized by g. The 
electric field, E, plays a similar role for 
charged objects that g does for objects that have 
mass.  -  
 - g has a dual role, because it is also the 
acceleration due to gravity. If only gravity acts 
on an object  - For a charged object acted on by an electric 
field only, the acceleration is given by 
Simulation 
 36Electric field lines
- Field line diagrams show the direction of the 
field, and give a qualitative view of the 
magnitude of the field at various points. The 
field is strongest where the lines are closer 
together.  - a  a uniform electric field directed down 
 - b  the field near a negative point charge 
 - c  field lines start on positive charges and end 
on negative charges. This is an electric dipole  
two charges of opposite sign and equal magnitude 
separated by some distance. 
  37Electric field vectors
- Field vectors give an alternate picture, and 
reinforce the idea that there is an electric 
field everywhere. The field is strongest where 
the vectors are darker.  - a  a uniform electric field directed down 
 - b  the field near a negative point charge 
 - c  field lines start on positive charges and end 
on negative charges. This is an electric dipole  
two charges of opposite sign and equal magnitude 
separated by some distance. 
  38Getting quantitative about field
- The field line and field vector diagrams are 
nice, but when we want to know about the electric 
field at a particular point those diagrams are 
not terribly useful.  - Instead, we use superposition. The net electric 
field at a particular point is the vector sum of 
the individual electric fields at that point. The 
individual fields sometimes come from individual 
charges. We assume these charges to be highly 
localized, so we call them point charges.  - Electric field from a point charge 
 - The field points away from a  charge, and 
towards a  charge.  
  39 A triangle of point charges
- Three point charges, having charges 
 - of equal magnitude, are placed at 
 - the corners of an equilateral triangle. 
 - The charge at the top vertex is 
 - negative, while the other two are 
 - positive. 
 - In what direction is the net electric field at 
point A, halfway between the positive charges?  - We could ask the same question in terms of force. 
  - In what direction is the net electric force on a 
______ charge located at point A? 
  40 A triangle of point charges
- Three point charges, having charges 
 - of equal magnitude, are placed at 
 - the corners of an equilateral triangle. 
 - The charge at the top vertex is 
 - negative, while the other two are 
 - positive. 
 - In what direction is the net electric field at 
point A, halfway between the positive charges?  - We could ask the same question in terms of force. 
  - In what direction is the net electric force on a 
positive charge located at point A? 
  41Net electric field at point A 
- In what direction is the net electric field at 
point A, halfway between the positive charges?  - 1. up 
 - 2. down 
 - 3. left 
 - 4. right 
 - 5. other 
 
  42Net electric field at point A
- The fields from the two positive charges cancel 
one another at point A.  - The net field at A is due only to the negative 
charge, which points toward the negative charge 
(up). 
  43Net electric field equals zero? 
Are there any locations, a finite distance from 
the charges, on the straight line passing through 
point A and the negative charge at which the net 
electric field due to the charges equals zero? If 
so, where is the field zero? 1. At some point 
above the negative charge 2. At some point 
between the negative charge and point A 3. At 
some point below point A 4. Both 1 and 3 5. 
Both 2 and 3 6. None of the above 
 44Net electric field equals zero?
- Simulation 
 - Inside the triangle, the field from the negative 
charge is directed up. What about the fields from 
the two positive charges? Do they have components 
up or down?  - At the top, and at point A, the field is 
 - dominated by ____________. 
 - Far away, the field is dominated 
 - by ______________. 
 -  
 -  
 
  45Net electric field equals zero?
- Simulation 
 - Inside the triangle, the field from the negative 
charge is directed up. What about the fields from 
the two positive charges? Do they have components 
up or down? Up. Thus, the net field everywhere 
inside the triangle has a component up.  - At the top, and at point A, the field is 
 - dominated by the negative charge. 
 - Far away, the field is dominated 
 - by the positive charges. 
 - In between, there must be 
 - a balance.
 
  46Worksheet where is the field zero?
- Two charges, 3Q and Q, are separated by 4 cm. 
Is there a point along the line passing through 
them (and a finite distance from the charges) 
where the net electric field is zero? If so, 
where?  - First, think qualitatively. 
 - Is there such a point to the 
 - left of the 3Q charge? 
 - Between the two charges? 
 - To the right of the Q charge? 
 -  
 
  47Where is the net field equal to zero? 
Is the net electric field equal to zero at some 
point in one of these three regions to the left 
of both charges (Region I), in between both 
charges (Region II), and/or to the right of both 
charges (Region III)? The field is zero at a 
point in 1. Region I 2. Region II 3. Region 
III 4. two of the above 5. all of the above 
 48Worksheet where is the field zero?
- In region I, the two fields point in opposite 
directions.  - In region II, both fields are directed to the 
right, so they cannot cancel.  - In region III, the two fields point in opposite 
directions.  - Now think about the magnitude of the fields. 
 
  49Worksheet where is the field zero?
- In region II, both fields are directed to the 
right, so they cannot cancel.  - In region I, every point is closer to the 
larger-magnitude charge than the 
smaller-magnitude charge, so the field from the 
3Q charge will always be larger than that from 
the Q charge. 
  50Worksheet where is the field zero?
- In region II, both fields are directed to the 
right, so they cannot cancel.  - In region I, the fields cannot cancel, either. 
 - In region III, we can strike a balance between 
the factor of 3 in the charges and the distances.  
  51Worksheet where is the field zero?
- How can we calculate where the point is? If the 
point is a distance x from the 3Q charge, then 
it is (x  4 cm) away from the -Q charge. Define 
right as positive, so  
  52Worksheet where is the field zero?
- The minus sign in front of the second term is not 
the one associated with the charge but the one 
associated with the direction of the field from 
the charge.  - The k's and Q's cancel. Re-arranging gives 
 - We could cross-multiply, expand the brackets, and 
solve using the quadratic equation, but theres a 
quicker way.  
  53Worksheet where is the field zero?
- Take the square root of both sides.
 
The two solutions are x  2.54 cm and x  9.46 
cm. Which one is correct? 
 54Two solutions 
Which of the two solutions is the one we want? 
 1. 2.54 cm 2. 9.46 cm 3. They are both valid 
solutions. Note if you decide one solution 
is not valid, you should be able to explain what 
its physical significance is. 
 55Where is the field zero?
- The net electric field is zero 9.46 cm to the 
right of the 3Q charge (and 5.46 cm to the right 
of the Q charge).  - The other solution is between the two charges, 
where the two fields point in the same direction. 
This point, 2.54 cm to the right of the 3Q 
charge, is where the two fields are equal in 
magnitude, but have the same direction.  
  56A test charge
- A test charge has a small enough charge that it 
has a negligible impact on the local electric 
field.  - Placing a positive test charge at a point can 
tell us the direction of the electric field at 
that point, and tell us roughly how strong the 
field is.  - The force on a positive test charge is in the 
same direction as the electric field, because 
 .  - Simulation
 
  57The net force on a test charge 
- The diagram shows the net force experienced by a 
positive test charge located at the center of the 
diagram. The force comes from two nearby charged 
balls, one with a charge of Q and one with an 
unknown charge. What is the sign and magnitude of 
the charge on the second ball?  -  Q/4 
 -  Q/2 
 -  Q 
 -  2Q 
 -  4Q 
 -  none of these
 
  58The net force on a test charge 
- This is the same as asking If the net electric 
field at the point at the center of the diagram 
is in the direction shown, what is the sign and 
magnitude of the charge on the second ball?  - The vector is at a 45 angle, so the 
 - two forces (or fields) must be 
 - identical. The Q charge sets up a 
 - force (or field) directed down. The 
 - second ball must set up a force (or 
 - field) directed left, away from itself, 
 - so it must be positive.
 
  59The net force on a test charge 
- If the two forces (or fields) are the same, how 
does the magnitude of the charge on the second 
ball compare to Q?  
  60The net force on a test charge 
- If the two forces (or fields) are the same, how 
does the magnitude of the charge on the second 
ball compare to Q?  - It must be smaller than Q, because the 
 - second ball is closer to the point 
 - were interested in. 
 - The first ball is twice as far away. 
 - Because distance is squared in the 
 - equation, the factor of 2 becomes 
 - a factor of 4. To offset this factor of 
 - 4, the second ball has a charge of Q/4.
 
  61The net force on a test charge, II 
- The diagram shows the net force experienced by a 
positive test charge located at the center of the 
diagram. The force comes from two nearby charged 
balls, one with a charge of Q and one with an 
unknown charge. What is the sign and magnitude of 
the charge on the second ball?  -  Q 
 -  Q v2 
 -  2Q 
 -  2Q v2 
 -  4Q 
 -  none of these
 
  62The net force on a test charge, II 
- In which direction is the force (or field) from 
the Q charge?  - What are the possible directions for the force 
(or field) from the second ball?  
  63The net force on a test charge, II 
- In which direction is the force (or field) from 
the Q charge?  - Down, away from the Q charge. 
 - What are the possible directions for the force 
(or field) from the second ball?  - Left, if it is positive, or right, if it 
 - is negative. 
 - Can we combine a vector down 
 - with a vector left or right to get 
 - the vector shown?
 
  64The net force on a test charge, II 
- In which direction is the force (or field) from 
the Q charge?  - Down, away from the Q charge. 
 - What are the possible directions for the force 
(or field) from the second ball?  - Left, if it is positive, or right, if it 
 - is negative. 
 - Can we combine a vector down 
 - with a vector left or right to get 
 - the vector shown? 
 - No  this situation is not possible.
 
  65Electric field near conductors, at equilibrium
- A conductor is in electrostatic equilibrium when 
there is no net flow of charge. Equilibrium is 
reached in a very short time after being exposed 
to an external field. At equilibrium, the charge 
and electric field follow these guidelines  -  
 -  the electric field is zero within the solid part 
of the conductor  -  the electric field at the surface of the 
conductor is perpendicular to the surface  -  any excess charge lies only at the surface of 
the conductor  -  charge accumulates, and the field is strongest, 
on pointy parts of the conductor  
  66Electric field near conductors, at equilibrium
At equilibrium the field is zero inside a 
conductor and perpendicular to the surface of the 
conductor because the electrons in the conductor 
move around until this happens. Excess 
charge, if the conductor has a net charge, can 
only be found at the surface. If any was in the 
bulk, there would be a net field inside the 
conductor, making electrons move. Usually the 
excess charge is on the outer surface. 
 67Electric field near conductors, at equilibrium
Charge piles up (and the field is strongest) at 
pointy ends of a conductor to balance forces on 
the charges. On a sphere, a uniform charge 
distribution at the surface balances the forces, 
as in (a) below. For charges in a line, a 
uniform distribution (b) does not correspond to 
equilibrium. Start out with the charges equally 
spaced, and the forces the charges experience 
push them so that they accumulate at the ends 
(c). 
 68A lightning rod 
- A van de Graaff generator acts like a 
thundercloud. We will place a large metal sphere 
near the van de Graaff and see what kind of 
sparks (lightning) we get. We will then replace 
the large metal sphere by a pointy piece of 
metal. In which case do we get more impressive 
sparks (lightning bolts)?  -  with the large sphere 
 -  with the pointy object 
 -  neither, the sparks are the same in the two 
cases 
  69A lightning rod
- The big sparks we get with the sphere are 
dangerous, and in real life could set your house 
on fire.  - With the lightning rod, the charge (and field) 
builds up so quickly that it drains charge out of 
the cloud slowly and continuously, avoiding the 
dangerous sparks.  - The lightning rod was invented by __________.
 
  70A lightning rod
- The big sparks we get with the sphere are 
dangerous, and in real life could set your house 
on fire.  - With the lightning rod, the charge (and field) 
builds up so quickly that it drains charge out of 
the cloud slowly and continuously, avoiding the 
dangerous sparks.  - The lightning rod was invented by Ben Franklin.
 
  71Electric potential energy (uniform field)
- For an object with mass in a uniform 
gravitational field, the change in gravitational 
potential energy is  - Similarly, for a charge q moving a distance d 
parallel to the electric field, the change in 
electric potential energy is  
  72Which way does it go? 
Whether it's an object with mass in a 
gravitational field, or a charged object in an 
electric field, when the object is released from 
rest it will accelerate in what direction? 1. 
Toward U  0 2. Away from U  0 3. In the 
direction of the field 4. In the direction of 
decreasing potential energy 5. In the direction 
of increasing potential energy 
 73Which way does it go? 
 74Which way does it go? 
 75Which way does it go? 
 76Which way does it go? 
 77Which way does it go?
- Masses and positive charges behave in a similar 
way, but negative charges move opposite in 
direction to positive charges. In all cases, the 
object accelerates in the direction of decreasing 
potential energy. This is true whether the field 
is uniform or non-uniform.  
  78Electric potential energy (for point charges)
- There is an electric potential energy associated 
with two charged objects, of charge q and Q, 
separated by a distance r. Note that the 
potential energy is defined to be zero when  - r  infinity. 
 - Potential energy is a scalar, so we handle signs 
differently than we do when we are handling 
vectors. Put the signs on the charges into the 
equation!  - This should remind you of the equivalent 
gravitational situation, in which 
Electric potential energy  
 79Interacting point charges 
Case 1 a charge q is placed at a point near a 
large fixed charge Q. Case 2 the q charge is 
replaced by a q charge of the same mass. In 
which case is the potential energy larger? 1. 
Case 1 2. Case 2 3. neither, the potential 
energy is equal in both cases 
 80Interacting point charges
- In case 1, the potential energy is positive. 
 - In case 2, the potential energy is negative. 
 - A positive scalar is bigger than a negative 
scalar (check with your bank manager about your 
bank balance if you have trouble with this 
concept!).  - Simulation
 
Electric potential energy  
 81Interacting point charges 
We now release the charges from rest and observe 
them for a particular time interval. Assuming no 
collisions have taken place, at the end of that 
time interval which charge will have the greatest 
speed? 1. The q charge 2. The q charge 3. 
Both charges will have the same speed 
 82Interacting point charges
- In this case, we can apply impulse  momentum 
ideas. The negative charge keeps getting closer 
to the central positive charge, so the force it 
feels increases. The opposite happens for the q 
charge. Because the q charge experiences a 
larger average force, its speed is larger after a 
given time interval.  
  83Escape speed
- How fast would you have to throw an object so it 
never came back down? Ignore air resistance. 
Let's find the escape speed - the minimum speed 
required to escape from a planet's gravitational 
pull.  -  
 - How should we try to figure this out? 
 - Attack the problem from a force perspective? 
 - From an energy perspective?
 
  84Escape speed
- How fast would you have to throw an object so it 
never came back down? Ignore air resistance. 
Let's find the escape speed - the minimum speed 
required to escape from a planet's gravitational 
pull.  -  
 - How should we try to figure this out? 
 - Attack the problem from a force perspective? 
 - From an energy perspective? 
 - Forces are hard to work with here, because the 
size of the force changes as the object gets 
farther away. Energy is easier to work with in 
this case. 
  85Escape speed
- Lets do an equivalent problem for two charged 
objects.  - Find an expression for the minimum speed an 
electron, which starts some distance r from a 
proton, must have to escape from the proton. 
Assume the proton remains at rest the whole time. 
  - Lets start with the conservation of energy 
equation.  - Which terms can we cross out immediately? 
 
  86Escape speed
- Which terms can we cross out immediately? 
 - Assume no resistive forces, so 
 - Assume the electron barely makes it 
 - to infinity, so both Uf and Kf are zero. 
 - This leaves 
 
  87Escape speed
- If the total mechanical energy is negative, the 
object comes back. If it is positive, it never 
comes back.  - Solving for the escape speed gives 
 - m is the mass of the electron r is the initial 
distance between them. For an electron in the 
hydrogen ground state, we get vescape  3.1  106 
m/s. 
  88Releasing two charges
- Two charged objects are placed close to one 
another and released from rest. Assume that each 
object is affected only by the other object. The 
objects always have equal-and-opposite velocities. 
  89Releasing two charges 
We observe that the motion of one object is a 
mirror image of the motion of the other. What, if 
anything, can we say about the two objects? 1. 
They have the same mass. 2. They have the same 
charge (sign and magnitude). 3. Both of the 
above. 4. Neither of the above has to be true. 
 90Releasing two charges
- How do the accelerations compare? 
 - How do the forces compare? (Can you answer this 
if you dont know how the charges compare?)  - How do the masses compare? 
 
  91Releasing two charges
- How do the accelerations compare? 
 - The accelerations are equal-and-opposite. 
 - How do the forces compare? (Can you answer this 
if you dont know how the charges compare?)  -  
 - How do the masses compare? 
 
  92Releasing two charges
- How do the accelerations compare? 
 - The accelerations are equal-and-opposite. 
 - How do the forces compare? (Can you answer this 
if you dont know how the charges compare?)  - The forces are equal-and-opposite, even if the 
charges are different (Newtons Third Law).  - How do the masses compare? 
 
  93Releasing two charges
- How do the accelerations compare? 
 - The accelerations are equal-and-opposite. 
 - How do the forces compare? (Can you answer this 
if you dont know how the charges compare?)  - The forces are equal-and-opposite, even if the 
charges are different (Newtons Third Law).  - How do the masses compare? 
 - They are the same, because m  F/a.
 
  94Releasing two charges, part II 
Now, the two balls have different masses. After 
the balls are released from rest, which ball has 
more kinetic energy? The speed of ball 1 is 
always four times that of ball 2. 1. The lighter 
one. 2. The heavier one. 3. They have equal 
kinetic energies. 
 95Splitting the kinetic energy
- Method 1 kinetic energy comes from work, force  
distance. The forces are equal, so the lighter 
ball ends up with more kinetic energy because it 
moves through a larger distance.  -  
 
  96Splitting the kinetic energy
- Method 2 apply momentum and energy conservation. 
After being released, the lighter ball always has 
four times the speed of the heavier one v  4V 
.  - The kinetic energies of the two are 
 - lighter one 
 - heavier one 
 - To conserve momentum, mv  MV, so the lighter 
mass must have four times the kinetic energy of 
the heavier one. 
  97Four charges in a square
- Four charges of equal magnitude are placed at the 
corners of a square that measures L on each side. 
There are two positive charges Q diagonally 
across from one another, and two negative charges 
-Q at the other two corners.  
  98Four charges in a square
Four charges of equal magnitude are placed at the 
corners of a square that measures L on each side. 
There are two positive charges Q diagonally 
across from one another, and two negative charges 
-Q at the other two corners. How much potential 
energy is associated with this configuration of 
charges? 1. Zero 2. Some positive value 3. 
Some negative value 
 99Four charges in a square
-  Determine how many ways you can pair up the 
charges. For each pair, write down the electric 
potential energy associated with the interaction. 
  - We have four terms that look like 
 - And two terms that look like 
 - Add up all the terms to find the total potential 
energy. Do we get an overall positive, negative, 
or zero value? 
  100Four charges in a square
-  Determine how many ways you can pair up the 
charges. For each pair, write down the electric 
potential energy associated with the interaction. 
  - We have four terms that look like 
 - And two terms that look like 
 - Add up all the terms to find the total potential 
energy. Do we get an overall positive, negative, 
or zero value? Negative 
  101Four charges in a square
- 2. The total potential energy is the work we do 
to assemble the configuration of charges. So, 
lets bring them in (from infinity) one at a 
time.  - It takes no work to bring in the  charge 1.  
 - Bringing in - charge 2 takes negative work, 
because we have to hold it back since it's 
attracted to charge 1.  
  102Four charges in a square
- 2. The total potential energy is the work we do 
to assemble the configuration of charges.  - Bringing in the  charge 3 takes very little 
work, since there's already one  charge and one 
 charge. The work done is also negative because 
it ends up closer to the negative charge.   - Bringing in the - fourth charge also takes 
negative work because there are two positive 
charges and one negative charge, so overall it's 
attracted to them.  - The total work done by us is negative, so the 
system has negative potential energy. 
  103Electrostatic Energy in molecules
A
B
Molecule A on the left has two negative 
charges. Molecule B on the right has three 
negative charges. Which molecule has the greater 
electrostatic energy?
wikipedia 
 104Electrostatic Energy in molecules
A
B
Molecule A on the left has two negative 
charges. Molecule B on the right has three 
negative charges. Which molecule has the greater 
electrostatic energy? Molecule B work is needed 
to add the third charge Bonus Organic Chem 
question what are the two molecules? 
 105Electrostatic Energy in molecules
ADP
ATP
Molecule A on the left has two negative 
charges. Molecule B on the right has three 
negative charges. Which molecule has the greater 
electrostatic energy? Molecule B work is needed 
to add the third charge Organic Chem question 
what are the two molecules? ADP, ATP. 
Adenosine Diphosphate Adenosine 
Triphosphate The basic energy currency in 
biology. 
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