Advertisements
Advertisements
Question
Suppose an attractive nuclear force acts between two protons which may be written as F=Ce−kr/r2. Suppose that k = 1 fermi−1 and that the repulsive electric force between the protons is just balanced by the attractive nuclear force when the separation is 5 fermi. Find the value of C.
Solution
By Coulomb's Law, electric force ,
`F = (Ce ^(-kr))/r^2`
Given , k = 1 fermi-1 = 1015 m
Taking
\[r = 5 \times {10}^{- 15} \text{ m }\] , we get
The electrostatic repulsion between the protons,
` therefore F_e = (Kq^2)/r^2`
\[ ⇒ F_e = \frac{9 \times {10}^9 \times \left( 1 . 6 \times {10}^{- 19} \right)^2}{\left( 5 \times {10}^{- 15} \right)^2}\]
= 9.216 N
The strong nuclear force is ,
And nuclear force,` F = Ce−kr/r2
Taking r = 5 × 10-15 m and k = 1 fermi−1, we get
` F_n = (Ce^(-kr))/r^2 = (C xx e^(-10^15 xx 5 xx 10^(-15)))/(5 xx 10^(-15))^2`
\[F_n = \frac{C \times {10}^{- 5}}{\left( 5 \times {10}^{- 15} \right)^2}\]
= 2.69 × 1026 × C
∵ Fn = Fe
⇒ 2.69 × 1026 × C = 9.216
Comparing both forces, we get
\[C = 3 . 42 \times {10}^{- 26} N \text{m}^2\]
APPEARS IN
RELATED QUESTIONS
The electrostatic force on a small sphere of charge 0.4 μC due to another small sphere of charge − 0.8 μC in air is 0.2 N.
- What is the distance between the two spheres?
- What is the force on the second sphere due to the first?
Suppose that the particle is an electron projected with velocity vx = 2.0 × 106 m s−1. If E between the plates separated by 0.5 cm is 9.1 × 102 N/C, where will the electron strike the upper plate? (|e| = 1.6 × 10−19 C, me = 9.1 × 10−31 kg)
One end of a 10 cm long silk thread is fixed to a large vertical surface of a charged non-conducting plate and the other end is fastened to a small ball of mass 10 g and a charge of 4.0× 10-6 C. In equilibrium, the thread makes an angle of 60° with the vertical. Find the surface charge density on the plate.
Two charged particles are placed 1.0 cm apart. What is the minimum possible magnitude of the electric force acting on each charge?
Two insulating small spheres are rubbed against each other and placed 1 cm apart. If they attract each other with a force of 0.1 N, how many electrons were transferred from one sphere to the other during rubbing?
Four equal charges of 2.0 × 10−6 C each are fixed at the four corners of a square of side 5 cm. Find the Coulomb's force experienced by one of the charges due to the other three.
A point charge produces an electric field of magnitude 5.0 NC−1 at a distance of 40 cm from it. What is the magnitude of the charge?
Three identical charges, each with a value of 1.0 × 10−8 C, are placed at the corners of an equilateral triangle of side 20 cm. Find the electric field and potential at the centre of the triangle.
What are the differences between the Coulomb force and the gravitational force?
Two-point charges of + 0.2 µµC and -0.2 µµC are separated by 1 o8 m. What is the value of the electric field at an axial point at a distance of 0.1 m from their mid-point?
A force F acts between sodium and chlorine ions of salt (sodium chloride) when put 1 cm apart in air. The permittivity of air and dielectric constant of water are `epsilon_0` and K respectively. When a piece of salt is put in water, electrical force acting between sodium and chlorine ions 1 cm apart is ____________.
For charges q1 and q2 separated by a distance R the magnitude of the electrostatic force is given by ______.
The unit of charge is ______.
A charge Q is divided into two parts of q and Q – q. If the coulomb repulsion between them when they are separated is to be maximum, the ratio of Q/q should be ______.
A spring of spring constant 5 × 103 N/m is stretched initially by 5 cm from the unstretched position. Then the work required to stretch it further by another 5 cm is:
Two charge – 10c and + 10 c are placed 10 cm apart. Potential at centre of the line joining the two charge is:-
The S.I unit of electric permittivity is
Two charges q and – 3q are placed fixed on x-axis separated by distance ‘d’. Where should a third charge 2q be placed such that it will not experience any force?
According to Coulomb's law, which is the correct relation for the following figure?