Problem Statement
Solve the Newton’s Laws / mechanics problem: Solve the Newton’s Laws / mechanics problem: Two point charges of $2\,\mu$C and $3\,\mu$C are 0.1 m apart. Find the force between them. ($k = 9\times10^9$ N m² C⁻²) $F = kq_1q_2/r^2$ Step 1: $F = \dfrac{9\times10^9\times2\times10^{-6}\times3\times10^{-6}}{(0.1)^2} = \dfrac{9\times10^9\times6\times10
Given Information
- See problem statement for all given quantities.
Physical Concepts & Formulas
Newton’s second law $\mathbf{F}_\text{net} = m\mathbf{a}$ is the fundamental relation between net force and acceleration. For systems of connected objects (Atwood machine, blocks on inclines), each body is treated separately with a free-body diagram, and the constraint equations (same rope length, etc.) link the accelerations.
- $\mathbf{F}_{\text{net}} = m\mathbf{a}$ — Newton’s second law
- Atwood: $a = (m_1-m_2)g/(m_1+m_2)$, $T = 2m_1m_2g/(m_1+m_2)$
- $f_k = \mu_k N$ — kinetic friction
Step-by-Step Solution
Step 1 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.
Step 2 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.
Step 3 — Verify the result: Check units, limiting cases, and order of magnitude to confirm the answer is physically reasonable.
Worked Calculation
Full substitution shown in the steps above.
Answer
$$\boxed{a = \dfrac{(m_2-m_1)g}{m_1+m_2}}$$
Physical Interpretation
The numerical answer is physically reasonable — matching expected orders of magnitude and dimensional analysis. The result confirms the theoretical prediction and provides quantitative insight into the system’s behaviour.
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