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Coulomb's Law)
In physics, Coulomb's law is an inverse-square law indicating the magnitude and direction of electrical force that one stationary, electrically charged substance of small volume (ideally, a point source) exerts on another.
When one is interested only in the magnitude of the force (and not in its direction), it may be easiest to consider a simplified, scalar version of the Law
- <math>
F = \frac{\left|q_1 q_2\right|}{4 \pi \epsilon_0 r^2}
<math>
where (in SI units):
F is the magnitude of the force exerted, measured in Newtons
q1 is the charge on one substance, measured in Coulombs
q2 is the charge on the other, also measured in Coulombs
r is the distance between them measured in metres
ε0 is a universal constant, the permittivity of vacuum
ε0 ≈ 8.854 × 10−12 Fm−1 or C2N−1m−2
Note that <math>\frac{1}{\mu_0\epsilon_0}=c^2<math>, where <math>\mu_0<math> is the permeability of vacuum and c is the speed of light.)
Among other things, this formula says that the magnitude of the force is directly proportional to the magnitude of the charges of each substance and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
The force F acts on the line connecting the two charged objects.
For calculating the direction and magnitude of the force simultaneously, one will wish to consult the full-blown vector version of the Law
- <math>\mathbf{F} = \frac{q_1 q_2 \mathbf{r}}{4 \pi \epsilon_0 \left|\mathbf{r}\right|^3}<math>
where <math>\mathbf{F}<math> is the electrostatic force vector,
and <math>\mathbf{r}<math> is the vector between the two charges, such that
- <math>\mathbf{r}=\mathbf{r_1}-\mathbf{r_2}<math>
where <math>r_1<math> is vector indicating the position of the charge on which the force acts,
and <math>r_2<math> is the vector indicating the position of the other charge.
This vector equation indicates that opposite charges attract, and like charges repel. When q1q2 is negative, the force is attractive. When positive, the force is repulsive. |r| has been raised to the third power instead of the second in the denominator in order to normalize the length of the r vector in the numerator to 1.
In either formulation, Coulomb's Law is fully accurate only when the substances are static (stationary), and remains approximately correct only for slow movement. When movement takes place, magnetic fields are produced that alter the force on the two substances. Especially when rapid movement takes place, the electric field will also undergo a transformation described by Einstein's theory of relativity.
See also
cs:Elektrická síla
de:Coulombsches Gesetz
es:Leyes de Coulomb
fr:Loi de Coulomb
ko:쿨롬의 법칙
it:Forza di Coulomb
nl:Wet van Coulomb
ja:クーロンの法則
ru:Закон Кулона
sl:Coulombov zakon
sv:Coulombs lag
zh:库仑定律
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