A uniformly charged insulating rod is bent into the shape of a semicircle of radius R = 5 cm. If the rod has a total charge of Q = 3.10-9C, find the magnitude and direction of the electric field at O, the center of the circle.

Respuesta :

leena

Hi there!

We can begin by using Coulomb's Law:

[tex]E = \frac{kq}{r^2}[/tex]

k = Coulomb's Constant (8.99 × 10⁹ Nm²/C²)

E = Electric field strength (N/C)
r = distance from point (m)

q = charge (C)

Since this is a continuous charge, we must use calculus.

We can express this as the following:
[tex]q = \lambda L[/tex]

λ = Linear charge density (C/m)

L = Length of rod (m)

Now, since this is an arc, L = s (arc length). Additionally, we must find the differential elements of each:
[tex]dq = \lambda ds\\\\dq = \lambda rd\theta[/tex]

Our new equation is:
[tex]dE = \frac{kdq}{r^2}\\\\dE = \frac{k\lambda rd\theta}{r^2}[/tex]

However, we will only take the cosine component of the electric field since the vertical components will cancel out. (Electric fields are a vector). Therefore:
[tex]dE = \frac{k\lambda rd\theta}{r^2}cos\theta\\\\dE = \frac{k\lambda}{r}cos\theta d\theta[/tex]

Integrate. For a semicircle, the bounds will be from -π/2 to π/2.

[tex]E = \frac{k\lambda}{r}\int\limits^{\frac{\pi}{2}}_{-\frac{\pi}{2}}} {cos\theta} \, d\theta\\\\E = \frac{k\lambda}{r}sin\theta\left \|{\frac{\pi}{2}} \atop {-\frac{\pi}{2}}} \right. \\\\E = \frac{k\lambda}{r}(1 - (-1)) = \frac{2k\lambda}{r}[/tex]

We need to solve for λ, which is Q/ L:
[tex]\lambda = \frac{3.10 \times 10^{-9} C}{\pi (0.05)} = 1.9735 \times 10^{-8} \frac{C}{m}[/tex]

Now, plug and solve for the electric field strength:
[tex]E = \frac{2(8.99\times 10^9)(1.9735\times 10^{-8})}{0.05} = \boxed{7096.783 \frac{N}{C}}[/tex]

**A diagram was not provided, but if the hemisphere's focus was to the right, the electric field would be to the right, and etcetera.

ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE