Coulomb's Law: Force Between Two Charges
= electric force magnitude (N) N·m²/C² ≈ N·m²/C² , = charge magnitudes (C) = distance between charges (m)
The formula gives magnitude only — direction comes from the sign rule.
How Force Drops with Distance
Doubling
Direction of the Electric Force
- Same sign (+ and + or − and −): repulsive — charges push apart
- Opposite sign (+ and −): attractive — charges pull together
- Newton's Third Law: force on
equals force on in magnitude
Procedure: magnitude first, then direction from sign rule.
Worked Example: Finding Force Magnitude
Given:
Step 1: Convert to coulombs:
Step 2: Apply Coulomb's Law:
Step 3: Direction — opposite signs → attractive
Distance Doubles — What Happens to Force?
Two positive charges experience force
If the distance doubles (
- A) Force halves →
- B) Force becomes one-quarter →
- C) Force doubles →
Inverse-Square Scaling: The Correct Answer
B) Force becomes one-quarter:
If
Remember: doubling
Moving from One Pair to Comparing Forces
You can now calculate the electric force between any two charges.
Coming up: How does this force compare to gravity — the other inverse-square law?
The comparison reveals something remarkable about atomic scale.
Coulomb's Law vs. Newton's Gravitation
Both are inverse-square laws — but
Why Electric Force Dominates at Atomic Scale
N·m²/C² vs. N·m²/kg²- For a proton-electron pair:
- Electric force is 39 orders of magnitude stronger at atomic scale
- Gravity is irrelevant in chemistry and atomic physics
Worked Example: Proton-Electron Force Ratio
Proton:
Electron:
Why Large Objects Are Electrically Neutral
- Matter contains roughly equal positive (protons) and negative (electrons) charges
- Charge cancellation: positive and negative cancel → near-zero net charge
- Large objects (planets, stars) appear electrically neutral — gravity dominates
- Gravity has no cancellation — all mass contributes positively
Why Doesn't Gravity Dominate at Atomic Scale?
Why does electric force dominate instead of gravity?
- A) Protons are too small for gravity to act on
- B) Gravity only acts between large objects
- C) Electric force is ~10³⁹ times stronger at this scale
- D) Gravity is repulsive at small distances
From One Pair to Multiple Charges
You can calculate the force between any single pair using Coulomb's Law.
What if a charge is surrounded by several other charges?
Each pair still obeys Coulomb's Law independently — superposition handles the rest.
Superposition Principle for Electric Forces
- Calculate each pairwise force independently using Coulomb's Law
- Assign direction based on attract/repel for each pair
- Add all forces as vectors (sign = direction in 1D)
This course focuses on 1D superposition — forces along one line.
Three-Charge Superposition: Finding Net Force
Find net force on B (−2 μC). Rightward = positive.
Step 1: Force on B from Charge A
A attracts B → force on B points left (negative direction)
Step 2: Force on B from Charge C
C attracts B → force on B points right (positive direction)
Step 3: Net Force on Charge B
Result: Net force = 0.55 N to the right
The pull from C (closer, to the right) wins over the pull from A (farther, to the left).
Guided Practice: Net Force on Middle Charge
Three charges:
Find the net force on the middle charge.
Step 1: Direction of each force?
Step 2: Magnitudes from Coulomb's Law
Step 3: Assign signs and sum
Direction Check: Force Between Opposite Charges
Charge A (+). Charge B (−). Force from A acts on B in which direction?
- A) Away from A — repulsive
- B) Toward A — attractive
- C) No force acts between unlike charges
- D) Depends on charge size
Repulsion or attraction — which rule applies?
Direction Check: Answer and Explanation
B) Toward A — attractive
- Opposite signs → attract
- Force on B points in the direction of A
- Magnitude calculated from
- Repulsion ≠ no force — a repulsive force still has magnitude and direction
Key Takeaways: Formula and Direction
✓
✓ Same sign → repels; opposite sign → attracts
✓ Newton's 3rd Law: both charges feel equal force
Repulsion = force pointing away — not zero force
Key Takeaways: Scaling and Superposition
✓ Doubling
✓ Electric force ~
✓ Charge cancellation makes large objects electrically neutral
✓ Superposition: pairwise forces calculated independently, then added
Doubling
Coming Up: The Electric Field
Lesson 3 of 5: Electric Field
- What is the electric influence of a single charge on the space around it?
- The electric field — Coulomb's Law extended to one source charge
Prepare: understand the difference between E = kq/r² and F = k|q₁q₂|/r²
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Coulomb's Law