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Forces between Multiple Charges

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Estimated time: 12 minutes
CBSE: Class 12

The Problem with Multiple Charges

  • The mutual electric force between two charges is given by Coulomb's law.
  • When there are not one but several charges around a given charge, Coulomb's law alone is not enough to calculate the net force.
  • Consider a system of n stationary charges q1, q2, q3,…, qn in vacuum — the question is: what is the force on q1 due to q2, q3,…, qn?
  • Forces of mechanical origin add according to the parallelogram law of addition, and the same is found to be true for forces of electrostatic origin.
CBSE: Class 12

Principle of Superposition

  • It is experimentally verified that the force on any charge due to a number of other charges is the vector sum of all the forces on that charge, taken one at a time.
  • The individual forces are unaffected by the presence of other charges.
  • This is termed the Principle of Superposition.

Mathematical Formulation:

  • Consider a system of three charges q1, q2, and q3.
  • The force on q1 due to q2 and q3 is obtained by performing a vector addition of the forces due to each one of these charges.
  • The force on q1 due to q2, denoted F12, is given by Coulomb's law even though other charges are present:
    F12 = \[\frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\cdot\frac{q_1q_2}{r_{12}^2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{12}\]
  • The force on q1 due to q3, denoted F13, is again the Coulomb force even though q2 is present:
    F13 = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\] ⋅ \[\frac{q_1q_3}{r_{13}^2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{13}\]
  • The total force F1 on q1 due to both q2 and q3 is (Equation 1.4):
    F1 = F12 + F13 = \[\frac {1}{4πε_0}\]\[\begin{bmatrix} \frac{q_1q_2}{r_{12}^2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{12}+\frac{q_1q_3}{r_{13}^2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{13} \end{bmatrix}\]
  • For a system of n charges, the force on q1 due to all other charges is (Equation 1.5):
    F1 = \[\frac{q_{1}}{4\pi\varepsilon_{0}}\sum_{i=2}^{n}\frac{q_{i}}{r_{1i}^{2}}\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{1i}\]
  • The vector sum is obtained by the parallelogram law of addition of vectors.
  • All of electrostatics is basically a consequence of Coulomb's law and the superposition principle.
CBSE: Class 12

Example 1

Given: Three charges q1 = q2 = q3 = q at vertices A, B, C of an equilateral triangle of side l. A charge Q (of the same sign as q) is placed at the centroid O.

  • The perpendicular AD to side BC has length AD = AC cos ⁡30° = \[\frac {\sqrt 3}{2}\]l.
  • The distance of centroid O from vertex A is AO = \[\frac {2}{3}\]AD = \[\frac {1}{\sqrt 3}\]l.
  • By symmetry, AO = BO = CO.
  • Force F1 on Q due to charge q at A = \[\frac{3}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\frac{Qq}{l^2}\] along AO.
  • Force F2 on Q due to charge q at B = \[\frac{3}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\frac{Qq}{l^2}\] along BO.
  • Force F3 on Q due to charge q at C = \[\frac{3}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\frac{Qq}{l^2}\] along CO.
  • The resultant of F2 and F3 is \[\frac{3}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\frac{Qq}{l^2}\] along OA, by the parallelogram law.
  • Therefore, the total force on Q = 0, since F1 and the resultant of F2 + F3 are equal and opposite.
  • It is also clear by symmetry that the three forces will sum to zero — if the resultant were non-zero in some direction, rotating the system through 60° about O would produce a contradiction.
CBSE: Class 12

Example 2

Given: Charges +q at A, +q at B, and −q at C at the vertices of an equilateral triangle of side l.

  • The force of attraction or repulsion for each pair of charges has the same magnitude:
    F = \[\frac{q^2}{4\pi\varepsilon_0l^2}\]
  • The forces on +q at A due to +q at B and −q at C are F12 along BA and F13 along AC, respectively.
  • By the parallelogram law, the total force on q at A is F1 = F\[\hat r_1\], where \[\hat r_1\] is a unit vector along BC.
  • The total force on q at B is F2 = F\[\hat r_2\], where \[\hat r_2\] is a unit vector along AC.
  • The total force on −q at C is F3 = \[\sqrt 3\] F \[\hat n\], where \[\hat n\] is the unit vector along the direction bisecting ∠BC A.
  • The sum of all forces on the three charges is zero: F1 + F2 + F3 = 0
  • This result follows directly from the fact that Coulomb's law is consistent with Newton's Third Law.
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