In physics, Coulomb's law is an inverse-square law indicating the magnitude and direction of electrostatic force that one stationary, electrically charged object of small dimensions (ideally, a point source) exerts on another. It is named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb who used a torsion balance to establish it.
Coulomb's law may be stated as follows:
"The magnitude of the electrostatic force between two point charges is directly proportional to the magnitudes of each charge and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the charges."
This is analogous to Newton's third law of motion in mechanics. The formula to Coulomb's Law is of the same form as Newton's Gravitational Law: The electrical force of one body exerted on the second body is equal to the force exerted by the second body on the first.
In cgs units, the unit charge, esu of charge or statcoulomb, is defined so that this Coulomb force constant is 1.
This formula says that the magnitude of the force is directly proportional to the magnitude of the charges of each object and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. When measured in units that people commonly use (such as MKS), the Coulomb force constant, , is numerically much much larger than the universal gravitational constant . This means that for objects with charge that is of the order of a unit charge (C) and mass of the order of a unit mass (kg), the electrostatic forces will be so much larger than the gravitational forces that the latter force can be ignored. This is not the case when Planck units are used and both charge and mass are of the order of the unit charge and unit mass. However, charged elementary particles have mass that is far less than the Planck mass while their charge is about the Planck charge so that, again, gravitational forces can be ignored.
The force acts on the line connecting the two charged objects. Charged objects of the same polarity repel each other along this line and charged objects of opposite polarity attact each other along this line connecting them.
Coulomb's law can also be interpreted in terms of atomic units with the force expressed in Hartrees per Bohr radius, the charge in terms of the elementary charge, and the distances in terms of the Bohr radius.
For a positive charge q, the direction of E points along lines directed radially away from the location of the point charge, while the direction is the opposite for a negative charge. Units: Volts per meter or Newtons per coulomb
This vector equation indicates that opposite charges attract, and like charges repel. When is negative, the force is attractive. When positive, the force is repulsive.
The accuracy of the exponent in Coulomb's Law has been found to differ from two by less than one in a billion by measuring the electric field inside a charged conducting shell.
| Particle property | Relationship | Field property | |
| Vector quantity |
| Force |
| \mathbf{F}={1 \over 4\pi\epsilon_0}{q_1 q_2 \over >r |
| Electric field |
| \mathbf{E}={1 \over 4\pi\epsilon_0}{q \over >r |
| Potential energy |
| U={1 \over 4\pi\epsilon_0}{q_1 q_2 \over >r |
| Potential |
| V={1 \over 4\pi\epsilon_0}{q \over >r |
قانون كولوم | কুলম্বের সূত্র | Elektrická síla | Coulombsches Gesetz | Ley de Coulomb | Loi de Coulomb (électrostatique) | 쿨롱의 법칙 | Forza di Coulomb | חוק קולון | Wet van Coulomb | クーロンの法則 | Coulombs lov | Prawo Coulomba | Lei de Coulomb | Закон Кулона | Coulombov zakon | Кулонов закон | Coulombin laki | Coulombs lag | Lực tĩnh điện | Кулона Закон | 库仑定律
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Coulomb's law".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world