CameraIcon
CameraIcon
SearchIcon
MyQuestionIcon
MyQuestionIcon
1
You visited us 1 times! Enjoying our articles? Unlock Full Access!
Question

In Coulomb's law, the value of the constant k is 14πε0 . Here ε0 is the vacuum permittivity. But what actually is permittivity here?


Open in App
Solution

Permittivity in Coulomb's Law:

  1. According to Coulomb's law, the force of interaction between two stationary point charges is proportional to the product of the charges, inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them and it acts along the line joining the charges.
  2. Let r1 and r2 be the position vectors of two point charges q1 and q2 with respect to some coordinate system.
  3. Let r21=r2-r1 be the vector from q1 to q2, r21=r21 be the distance between q1 and q2 and r^21=r21r21 be the unit vector in the direction from q1 to q2.
  4. Then from Coulomb's law, the force on q2 due to q1 is F=k.q1q2r212r^21, where k is a constant of proportionality.
  5. The value of k depends on the nature of the surrounding medium and the system of units used.
  6. In vacuum in SI units F21 is in newtons N, q1, q2 in coulombs C, r21 in meters and k=14πε0.
  7. Here ε0 is called the permittivity of free space which is defined as the distributed capacitance in vacuum.
  8. The measured value of ε0 is 8.85×10-12C2/N-m2.
  9. For simplified numerical calculations one can approximately use 14πε0=9×109N-m2/C2.

flag
Suggest Corrections
thumbs-up
74
Join BYJU'S Learning Program
similar_icon
Related Videos
thumbnail
lock
Idea of Charge
PHYSICS
Watch in App
Join BYJU'S Learning Program
CrossIcon