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garri49 [273]
3 years ago
7

Two identical 9.10-g metal spheres (small enough to be treated as particles) are hung from separate 700-mm strings attached to t

he same nail in a ceiling. Surplus electrons are added to each sphere, and then the spheres are brought in contact with each other and released. Their equilibrium position is such that each string makes a 17.0° angle with the vertical.
How many surplus electrons are on each sphere?

Physics
1 answer:
aleksandr82 [10.1K]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

The number of electrons surplussed on each surface is \bf{2 \times 10^{21}}.

Explanation:

Given:

The masses of the sphere, m = 9.10~g

The length of the strings, L = 700~mm

The angle made by each string with vertical, \theta = 17.0^{0}

According to the diagram, the equilibrium condition for the vertical components of the forces acting on each sphere can be written as

T \cos \theta = mg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(1)

The equilibrium condition for the horizontal components of the forces acting on each sphere can be written as

T \sin \theta = F~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(2)

Here, F is the electrostatic force experienced by the metal spheres.

The value of the electrostatic force is given by

F = \dfrac{q^{2}}{r^{2}}~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(3)

Here, q is the charge on each sphere and r is the distance between them.

Referring to the figure, from \bigtriangleup QOR,

&& \dfrac{r/2}{L} = \sin \theta\\&or,& r = 2L \sin \theta

Substituting the value of r in equation (3), we have

F = \dfrac{q^{2}}{(2L \sin \theta)^{2}}~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(4)

From equation (1),

T &=& \dfrac{mg}{\cos \theta}\\&=& \dfrac{(9.10~g)(980~cm/s^{2})}{\cos 17^{0}}\\&=& 9325.7~dyn

Substituting the values of T and F in equation (2), we have

&& (9325.7~dyn) \sin 17^{0} = \dfrac{q^{2}}{(2 \times 70 \times \sin 17^{0})}\\&or,& q^{2} = ((9325.7~dyn) \sin 17^{0})(2 \times 70 \times \sin 17^{0})\\&or,& q = 334~C

If n is the number if electron surplussed with the metal sphere, then

ne = q~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(5)

Here, e is the electronic charge.

Substituting the value of e and q in equation (5), we have

n &=& \dfrac{q}{e}\\~~~&=& \dfrac{334~C}{1.6 \times 10^{-19}~C}\\~~~&=& 2 \times 10^{21}

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