Coulomb force, also
called electrostatic force or Coulomb interaction,
attraction or repulsion of particles or objects because of their electric
charge. One of the basic physical forces, the electric force
is named for a French physicist, Charles-Augustin
de Coulomb, who in 1785 published the results of an
experimental investigation into the correct quantitative description of this
force.
Two like electric charges, both positive or both negative, repel
each other along a straight line between their centres. Two unlike charges, one
positive, one negative, attract each other along a straight line joining their
centres. The electric force is operative between charges down to distances of
at least 10-16 metre, or approximately one-tenth of the
diameter of atomic nuclei. Because of their positive charge, protons within
nuclei repel each other, but nuclei hold together because of another basic
physical force, the strong interaction, or nuclear
force, which is stronger than the electric force. Massive,
but electrically neutral, astronomical bodies such as planets and stars are
bound together in solar systems and galaxies by still another basic physical
force, gravitation,
which though much weaker than the electric force, is always attractive and is
the dominant force at great distances. At distances between these extremes,
including the distances of everyday life, the only significant physical force
is the electric force in its many varieties along with the related magnetic
force.
The magnitude of the electric force F is
directly proportional to the amount of one electric charge, q1,
multiplied by the other, q2, and
inversely proportional to the square of the distance r between
their centres. Expressed in the form of an equation, this relation, called Coulomb’s
law, may be written by including the proportionality factor k as F = kq1q2/r2. In
the centimetre–gram–second system of units, the proportionality factor k in a
vacuum is set equal to 1 and unit electric charge is defined by Coulomb’s law.
If an electric force of one unit (one dyne) arises between two equal electric
charges one centimetre apart in a vacuum, the amount of each charge is one
electrostatic unit, esu,
or statcoulomb. In the metre–kilogram–second and the SI systems, the unit of
force (newton), the unit of charge (coulomb), and the unit of distance (metre),
are all defined independently of Coulomb’s law, so the proportionality factor k is
constrained to take a value consistent with these definitions, namely, k in a
vacuum equals 8.98 × 109 newton square metre per square coulomb.
This choice of value for k permits the practical electrical
units, such as ampere and volt, to be included with the common metric
mechanical units, such as metre and kilogram, in the same system.
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