10 Solved Numericals on Electric Charges and Fields
NCERT Chapter 1 • Practice Problems with Step-by-Step Solutions
1. Force Between Two Point Charges
Problem: Two point charges of +3 μC and -5 μC are placed 15 cm apart in air. Calculate the magnitude and direction of the electrostatic force on each charge. What happens to the force if the charges are immersed in water (dielectric constant κ = 80)?
Using Coulomb’s law:
Since charges are opposite, force is attractive.
Magnitude of force on each charge = 6.0 N (Newton’s third law)
In water:
2. Net Force on Charge Due to Multiple Charges
Problem: Three charges +2 μC, -3 μC, and +4 μC are placed at the vertices of an equilateral triangle of side 10 cm. Calculate the magnitude and direction of the net force on the +2 μC charge.
Side length
Direction: Attractive → towards B
Direction: Repulsive → away from C
Angle between forces = 60° (equilateral triangle)
3. Electric Field Due to Point Charges
Problem: Two point charges +10 nC and -10 nC are placed 8 cm apart. Calculate the electric field at a point 5 cm from each charge (forming an equilateral triangle).
Angle between fields = 60°
Vertical components cancel (equal magnitude, opposite direction)
Horizontal components add:
Direction: Horizontal, from +q towards -q
4. Electric Field on Dipole Axis
Problem: An electric dipole with charges ±5 nC separated by 2 mm is placed in vacuum. Calculate the electric field at a point 15 cm from the dipole center (a) on the axial line, and (b) on the equatorial line.
Direction: Same as dipole moment (–q to +q)
Direction: Opposite to dipole moment
5. Torque on Dipole in Uniform Field
Problem: An electric dipole of dipole moment 4 × 10⁻⁹ C·m is placed at 30° with a uniform electric field of magnitude 5 × 10⁴ N/C. Calculate (a) the torque acting on the dipole, and (b) the potential energy of the dipole.
Direction: Perpendicular to plane containing p and E (right-hand rule)
6. Electric Flux Through a Surface
Problem: A uniform electric field of magnitude 3 × 10³ N/C makes an angle of 60° with the normal to a square surface of side 10 cm. Calculate the electric flux through the surface.
7. Gauss’s Law: Field Due to Infinite Line Charge
Problem: An infinitely long straight wire has a uniform linear charge density of 2 μC/m. Calculate the electric field at a perpendicular distance of 5 cm from the wire.
For cylindrical Gaussian surface of radius r and length l:
Flux through curved surface:
Charge enclosed:
By Gauss’s law:
Direction: Radially outward (since λ > 0)
8. Gauss’s Law: Charged Spherical Shell
Problem: A thin spherical shell of radius 10 cm has a uniform surface charge density of 80 μC/m². Calculate the electric field at distances (a) 5 cm, (b) 10 cm, and (c) 20 cm from the center of the shell.
Total charge:
For points inside a charged shell:
9. Field Due to Infinite Plane Sheet
Problem: Two large parallel metal plates carry surface charge densities of +17.7 × 10⁻²² C/m² and -17.7 × 10⁻²² C/m² on their inner faces. Calculate the electric field (a) between the plates, and (b) outside the plates.
For an infinite sheet:
(a) Between plates: Fields add up
Direction: From positive to negative plate
(b) Outside plates: Fields oppose and cancel
10. Charge Quantization Problem
Problem: A polythene piece rubbed with wool acquires a charge of -3 × 10⁻⁷ C. (a) Estimate the number of electrons transferred. (b) Is there any transfer of mass from wool to polythene? If yes, calculate the mass transferred. (Mass of electron = 9.1 × 10⁻³¹ kg)
Since charge is negative, electrons are transferred FROM wool TO polythene.
Yes, mass is transferred with electrons.
Mass transferred:
• Always convert units to SI before calculations (cm → m, μC → C)
• For vector quantities (force, field), determine both magnitude AND direction
• Apply superposition principle carefully for multiple charges
• For Gauss’s law problems, choose Gaussian surface matching symmetry (sphere, cylinder, pillbox)
• Remember: Field inside conductor = 0 in electrostatic conditions; field inside charged shell = 0
