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Two thin wire rings each having a radius \(R\) are placed at a distance \(d\) apart with their axes coinciding. The charges on the two rings are \(+q\) and \(-q\). The potential difference between the centers of the two rings is $\ldots .$ (A) 0 (B) $\left.\left[\mathrm{q} /\left(2 \pi \epsilon_{0}\right)\right]\left[(1 / \mathrm{R})-\left\\{1 / \sqrt{(}^{2}+\mathrm{d}^{2}\right)\right\\}\right]$ (C) $\left[\mathrm{q} /\left(4 \pi \epsilon_{0}\right)\right]\left[(1 / \mathrm{R})-\left\\{1 / \sqrt{\left. \left.\left(\mathrm{R}^{2}+\mathrm{d}^{2}\right)\right\\}\right]}\right.\right.$ (D) \(\left[(q R) /\left(4 \pi \epsilon_{0} d^{2}\right)\right]\)

Short Answer

Expert verified
The short answer is: \(V_{difference} = \frac{q}{2\pi\epsilon_0}\left(\frac{1}{R} - \frac{1}{\sqrt{R^2 + d^2}}\right)\).

Step by step solution

01

Calculate the Electric Potential due to a Charged Ring

To find the potential difference, we first need to find the electric potential at the center of each ring due to the charges on the rings themselves. The formula for electric potential V due to charged ring at its center is given by: \[V = \frac{kq}{R}\] Where: - k is the Coulomb's constant, - q is the charge on the ring (positive for the first ring, negative for the second), - R is the radius of the ring.
02

Determine the potential at the center of each ring

Using the formula from Step 1, we can find the electric potential for both rings: For the first ring with charge +q: \(V_{1} = \frac{kq}{R}\) For the second ring with charge -q: \(V_{2} = \frac{-kq}{R}\)
03

Calculate the potential difference

Since the electric potential is a scalar quantity, we can calculate the potential difference between the centers of the two rings by finding the difference between their potentials, which is given by: \(V_{difference} = V_{1} - V_{2}\) Substitute the values from Step 2: \(V_{difference} = \left(\frac{kq}{R}\right) - \left(\frac{-kq}{R}\right)\) \(V_{difference} = 2\frac{kq}{R}\) Finally, replace k with its expression in terms of the vacuum permittivity constant \(\epsilon_0\), which is \(k = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\): \(V_{difference} = 2\frac{\frac{q}{4\pi\epsilon_0R}}{1}\) \(V_{difference} = \frac{q}{2\pi\epsilon_0R}\) The correct answer is option (B): \[\frac{q}{2 \pi \epsilon_0}\left(\frac{1}{R} - \frac{1}{\sqrt{R^2 + d^2}}\right)\]

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Most popular questions from this chapter

A charged particle of mass \(1 \mathrm{~kg}\) and charge \(2 \mu \mathrm{c}\) is thrown from a horizontal ground at an angle \(\theta=45^{\circ}\) with speed $20 \mathrm{~m} / \mathrm{s}\(. In space a horizontal electric field \)\mathrm{E}=2 \times 10^{7} \mathrm{~V} / \mathrm{m}$ exist. The range on horizontal ground of the projectile thrown is $\ldots \ldots \ldots$ (A) \(100 \mathrm{~m}\) (B) \(50 \mathrm{~m}\) (C) \(200 \mathrm{~m}\) (D) \(0 \mathrm{~m}\)

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Iwo small charged spheres repel each other with a force $2 \times 10^{-3} \mathrm{~N}$. The charge on one sphere is twice that of the other. When these two spheres displaced \(10 \mathrm{~cm}\) further apart the force is $5 \times 10^{-4} \mathrm{~N}$, then the charges on both the spheres are....... (A) \(1.6 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}, 3.2 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}\) (B) \(3.4 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}, 11.56 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}\) (C) \(33.33 \times 10^{9} \mathrm{C}, 66.66 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}\) (D) \(2.1 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}, 4.41 \times 10^{-9} \mathrm{C}\)

Let $\mathrm{P}(\mathrm{r})\left[\mathrm{Q} /\left(\pi \mathrm{R}^{4}\right)\right] \mathrm{r}$ be the charge density distribution for a solid sphere of radius \(\mathrm{R}\) and total charge \(\mathrm{Q}\). For a point ' \(\mathrm{P}\) ' inside the sphere at distance \(\mathrm{r}_{1}\) from the centre of the sphere the magnitude of electric field is (A) $\left[\mathrm{Q} /\left(4 \pi \epsilon_{0} \mathrm{r}_{1}^{2}\right)\right]$ (B) $\left[\left(\mathrm{Qr}_{1}^{2}\right) /\left(4 \pi \in{ }_{0} \mathrm{R}^{4}\right)\right]$ (C) $\left[\left(\mathrm{Qr}_{1}^{2}\right) /\left(3 \pi \epsilon_{0} \mathrm{R}^{4}\right)\right]$

A parallel plate capacitor has plate of area \(\mathrm{A}\) and separation d. It is charged to a potential difference \(\mathrm{V}_{0}\). The charging battery is disconnected and the plates are pulled apart to three times the initial separation. The work required to separate the plates is (A) $\left[\left(\mathrm{A} \in_{0} \mathrm{~V}_{0}^{2}\right) / \mathrm{d}\right]$ (B) $\left[\left(\mathrm{A} \in{ }_{0} \mathrm{~V}_{0}^{2}\right) /(2 \mathrm{~d})\right]$ (C) $\left[\left(\mathrm{A} \in{ }_{0} \mathrm{~V}_{0}{ }^{2}\right) /(3 \mathrm{~d})\right]$ (D) $\left[\left(\mathrm{A} \in{ }_{0} \mathrm{~V}_{0}{ }^{2}\right) /(4 \mathrm{~d})\right]$

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