The Cosmic Perspective (9th Edition)
The Cosmic Perspective (9th Edition)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780134874364
Author: Jeffrey O. Bennett, Megan O. Donahue, Nicholas Schneider, Mark Voit
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 22, Problem 50EAP

Gravity vs. the Electromagnetic Force. The amount of electromagnetic force between two charged objects can be computed with an inverse square law similar to Newton’s universal law of gravitation; for the electromagnetic force, the law is F = k × ( Charge of object 1 ) × ( Charge of object 2 ) d 2
In this formula, the charges must be given in units of coulombs (abbreviated C), the distance d between the objects’ centers must be in meters, and the constant  k = 9 × 10 9 kg × m 3 / ( C 2 × s 2 ) .

  1. Compute the gravitational force between your body and Earth using Newton’s universal law of gravitation (see Section 4.4 or Appendix B).
  2. Now suppose all the electrons suddenly disappeared from Earth, making it positively charged, and all the protons in your body suddenly changed into neutrons, making you negatively charged. Compute the strength of the electromagnetic force between the electrons in your body and the protons in Earth. Assume that the charge per unit of mass of both you and Earth is  5 × 10 7 C / kg .
  3. Compare the electromagnetic force from part b to the gravitational force from part a. Use that result to explain why gravity is considered weaker than the electromagnetic force.

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It has been speculated that gravity does not truly exist as a force in and of itself, but is instead a manifestation of the electrostatic force, which is the force responsible for the repulsion of like-charges and the attraction of opposite charges. Is this a credible theory? Why or why not? What experiment could a person conduct to test this theory?
Assume that you have two objects, one witha mass of 8 kg and the other with a mass of16 kg, each with a charge of −0.023 C andseparated by a distance of 3 m.What is the electric force that these objectsexert on one another?Answer in units of N. What is the gravitational force between them?Answer in units of N.
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The Cosmic Perspective (9th Edition)

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