asked 67.2k views
1 vote
The masses of the earth and moon are 5.98 x 1024 and 7.35 x 1022 kg, respectively. Identical amounts of charge are placed on each body, such that the net force (gravitational plus electrical) on each is zero. What is the magnitude of the charge placed on each body?

asked
User Qqq
by
7.9k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:


Q\ =\ 5.70* 10^(13)\ C.

Step-by-step explanation:

Given,

  • Mass of the earth =
    m_1\ =\ 5.98* 10^(24)\ kg
  • Mass of the moon =
    m_2\ =\ 7.35* 10^(22)\ kg
  • universal gravitational constant = G =
    6.67* 10^(-11)\ m^2kg^(-1)s^(-2)

Let Q be charges on the both earth and the moon, and 'r' be the distance between the earth and the moon.

Gravitational force between the earth and the moon is attractive while electrical force between the earth and the moon is repulsive due to identical charges. Hence both are opposite in the sing but are equal in magnitude


\therefore (Gm_1m_2)/(r^2)\ +\ (-kQ^2)/(r^2)\\\Rightarrow Gm_1m_2\ =\ kQ^2\\\Rightarrow Q\ =\ \sqrt{(Gm_1m_2)/(k)}\\\Rightarrow Q\ =\ \sqrt{(6.67* 10^(-11)* 5.98* 10^(24)* 7.35* 10^(22))/(9* 10^9)}\\\Rightarow 5.707* 10^(13)\ C

Hence, the charges on both the earth and the moon are the same as of
5.707* 10^(13)\ C.

answered
User Wayne Smallman
by
8.7k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.