A small object with electric dipole moment p → is placed in a nonuniform electric field E → = E ( x ) i ^ . That is, the field is in the x direction, and its magnitude depends only on the coordinate x . Let θ represent the angle between the dipole moment and the x direction. Prove that the net force on the dipole is F = p ( d E d x ) cos θ acting in the direction of increasing field.
A small object with electric dipole moment p → is placed in a nonuniform electric field E → = E ( x ) i ^ . That is, the field is in the x direction, and its magnitude depends only on the coordinate x . Let θ represent the angle between the dipole moment and the x direction. Prove that the net force on the dipole is F = p ( d E d x ) cos θ acting in the direction of increasing field.
Solution Summary: The author explains that the net force on the dipole is F=p(dE)mathrmcostheta .
A small object with electric dipole moment
p
→
is placed in a nonuniform electric field
E
→
=
E
(
x
)
i
^
. That is, the field is in the x direction, and its magnitude depends only on the coordinate x. Let θ represent the angle between the dipole moment and the x direction. Prove that the net force on the dipole is
Part C
Find the height yi
from which the rock was launched.
Express your answer in meters to three significant figures.
Learning Goal:
To practice Problem-Solving Strategy 4.1 for projectile motion problems.
A rock thrown with speed 12.0 m/s and launch angle 30.0 ∘ (above the horizontal) travels a horizontal distance of d = 19.0 m before hitting the ground. From what height was the rock thrown? Use the value g = 9.800 m/s2 for the free-fall acceleration.
PROBLEM-SOLVING STRATEGY 4.1 Projectile motion problems
MODEL: Is it reasonable to ignore air resistance? If so, use the projectile motion model.
VISUALIZE: Establish a coordinate system with the x-axis horizontal and the y-axis vertical. Define symbols and identify what the problem is trying to find. For a launch at angle θ, the initial velocity components are vix=v0cosθ and viy=v0sinθ.
SOLVE: The acceleration is known: ax=0 and ay=−g. Thus, the problem becomes one of…
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