Class XII · Physics · Chapter 1 · Electrostatics

Exercise
Solutions

All 24 questions — solved neatly, like a fair notebook ✏️

Akshit Tyagi
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Akshit Tyagi
Class XII · Physics Fair Notes
01 · Coulomb's Law 02 · Charge Properties 03 · Electric Field 04 · Gauss's Law 05 · Applications
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01
Coulomb's Law
Q 1.1 · 1.2 · 1.12 · 1.13
$F = k\dfrac{q_1 q_2}{r^2}$, where $k = 9\times10^9$ N m² C⁻². Like charges repel, unlike attract. Newton's 3rd law holds — force on $q_1$ due to $q_2$ is equal and opposite to force on $q_2$ due to $q_1$.
+q₁ +q₂ F₁₂ F₂₁ r

Like charges — force is repulsive, equal and opposite by Newton's 3rd law

Q 1.1
Two small charged spheres: $q_1 = 2\times10^{-7}$ C, $q_2 = 3\times10^{-7}$ C, placed 30 cm apart in air. Find force.
Given: $q_1 = 2\times10^{-7}$ C, $q_2 = 3\times10^{-7}$ C, $r = 0.30$ m
$$F = k\frac{q_1 q_2}{r^2} = \frac{9\times10^9 \times 2\times10^{-7} \times 3\times10^{-7}}{(0.30)^2}$$
$$F = \frac{9\times10^9 \times 6\times10^{-14}}{0.09} = \frac{54\times10^{-5}}{0.09}$$
★ Answer $$F = 6\times10^{-3}\text{ N} = 6\text{ mN} \quad \text{(repulsive)}$$
Q 1.2
Electrostatic force on sphere A (charge $0.4\ \mu$C) due to sphere B (charge $-0.8\ \mu$C) is $0.2$ N. (a) Find distance $r$. (b) Force on B due to A?
Given: $q_1 = 4\times10^{-7}$ C, $q_2 = 8\times10^{-7}$ C, $F = 0.2$ N (attractive)
Part (a) — Distance
$$r^2 = \frac{kq_1q_2}{F} = \frac{9\times10^9 \times 4\times10^{-7} \times 8\times10^{-7}}{0.2}$$
$$r^2 = \frac{9\times10^9 \times 32\times10^{-14}}{0.2} = \frac{288\times10^{-5}}{0.2} = 144\times10^{-4}$$
★ (a) $$r = 12\times10^{-2}\text{ m} = 0.12\text{ m} = 12\text{ cm}$$
Part (b) — Force on B
Newton's 3rd Law: Force on B due to A = $0.2$ N, directed toward A (attractive). Equal in magnitude, opposite in direction.
Q 1.12
Two conducting spheres A and B, each with charge $q = 6.5\times10^{-7}$ C, centres 50 cm apart. (a) Find repulsive force. (b) What if each charge is doubled and distance halved?
Given: $q = 6.5\times10^{-7}$ C, $r = 0.50$ m
Part (a)
$$F = \frac{9\times10^9\times(6.5\times10^{-7})^2}{(0.5)^2} = \frac{9\times10^9\times42.25\times10^{-14}}{0.25}$$
★ (a) $$F = 1.52\times10^{-2}\text{ N}$$
Part (b) — Charge doubled, distance halved
New charge $= 2q$, new distance $= r/2$. So: $$F' = \frac{k(2q)^2}{(r/2)^2} = \frac{4kq^2}{r^2/4} = 16\cdot\frac{kq^2}{r^2} = 16F$$
★ (b) $$F' = 16 \times 1.52\times10^{-2} \approx 0.243\text{ N}$$
Q 1.13
Spheres A and B from Q 1.12 (identical size, $q = 6.5\times10^{-7}$ C each). An uncharged sphere C (same size) touches A first, then B, then removed. New force between A and B?
$q_A = q_B = 6.5\times10^{-7}$ C, $r = 0.50$ m, C uncharged initially
C touches A: charge shared equally. $$q_A' = q_C' = \frac{6.5\times10^{-7}}{2} = 3.25\times10^{-7}\text{ C each}$$
C then touches B: total charge $= 3.25 + 6.5 = 9.75\ (\times10^{-7})$ C, shared equally. $$q_B'' = q_C'' = \frac{9.75\times10^{-7}}{2} = 4.875\times10^{-7}\text{ C}$$
Final: $q_A = 3.25\times10^{-7}$ C, $q_B = 4.875\times10^{-7}$ C, $r = 0.50$ m $$F = \frac{9\times10^9\times3.25\times10^{-7}\times4.875\times10^{-7}}{(0.5)^2}$$
★ Answer $$F \approx 5.7\times10^{-3}\text{ N} \quad \text{(repulsive)}$$
02
Properties of Electric Charge
Q 1.3 · 1.4 · 1.5 · 1.11
Charge is quantised ($q = ne$), conserved, and additive. Electron charge $e = 1.6\times10^{-19}$ C. Electric force is $\sim10^{39}$ times stronger than gravitational force between a proton and electron.
Q 1.3
Show that the ratio $\dfrac{ke^2}{Gm_em_p}$ is dimensionless and find its value. What does it signify?
$k=9\times10^9,\ e=1.6\times10^{-19}$ C, $G=6.67\times10^{-11}$, $m_e=9.11\times10^{-31}$ kg, $m_p=1.67\times10^{-27}$ kg
Dimensions: $[ke^2] = \text{N m}^2\text{C}^{-2}\cdot\text{C}^2 = \text{N m}^2$. $[Gm_em_p] = \text{N m}^2\text{kg}^{-2}\cdot\text{kg}^2 = \text{N m}^2$. Ratio is dimensionless
Numerator: $ke^2 = 9\times10^9\times(1.6\times10^{-19})^2 = 9\times10^9\times2.56\times10^{-38} = 23.04\times10^{-29}$
Denominator: $Gm_em_p = 6.67\times10^{-11}\times9.11\times10^{-31}\times1.67\times10^{-27} = 1.015\times10^{-67}$
★ Answer $$\frac{ke^2}{Gm_em_p} \approx 2.27\times10^{39}$$ Electric force between e⁻ and p⁺ is $2.27\times10^{39}$ times stronger than gravitational force between them
Q 1.4
(a) What is quantisation of electric charge? (b) Why can we ignore quantisation for macroscopic charges?
Part (a)

Quantisation: Electric charge always exists as integer multiples of a minimum charge $e = 1.6\times10^{-19}$ C. So $q = \pm ne$ where $n = 1, 2, 3, \ldots$

$$q = ne, \quad n \in \mathbb{Z}, \quad e = 1.6\times10^{-19}\text{ C}$$
Part (b)

For macroscopic charges (say $1\ \mu$C $= 10^{-6}$ C), the number of electrons involved is $n \sim 10^{13}$ — so the charge appears practically continuous. The "graininess" due to $e$ is completely negligible at that scale.

Q 1.5
When glass is rubbed with silk, charges appear on both. How is this consistent with conservation of charge?

Before rubbing: both glass and silk are electrically neutral — total charge $= 0$.

On rubbing, electrons transfer from glass to silk (or vice versa). Glass gains $+Q$, silk gains $-Q$.

Total charge after $= +Q + (-Q) = 0$ — same as before. Charge is neither created nor destroyed, only transferred. This is perfect consistency with the Law of Conservation of Charge.
Q 1.11
A polythene piece rubbed with wool has charge $-3\times10^{-7}$ C. (a) Estimate number of electrons transferred. (b) Is there a transfer of mass?
$q = 3\times10^{-7}$ C (negative on polythene), $e = 1.6\times10^{-19}$ C, $m_e = 9.11\times10^{-31}$ kg
Part (a)
$$n = \frac{q}{e} = \frac{3\times10^{-7}}{1.6\times10^{-19}}$$
★ (a) $$n \approx 1.875\times10^{12}\text{ electrons transferred from wool to polythene}$$
Part (b) — Mass transferred
$$\Delta m = n\cdot m_e = 1.875\times10^{12}\times9.11\times10^{-31} \approx 1.71\times10^{-18}\text{ kg}$$
Yes — a tiny mass is transferred (wool loses, polythene gains), but it is so negligibly small ($\sim10^{-18}$ kg) that it is undetectable in practice.
03
Electric Field & Dipole
Q 1.6 · 1.7 · 1.8 · 1.9 · 1.10
$E = kq/r^2$ for a point charge. For a dipole: $p = q\cdot2a$. Torque on dipole: $\tau = pE\sin\theta$. Fields from two equal opposite charges at a midpoint add up (same direction).
Q 1.6
Four charges at corners of square ABCD (side 10 cm): $q_A = 2\ \mu$C, $q_B = -5\ \mu$C, $q_C = 2\ \mu$C, $q_D = -5\ \mu$C. Force on $1\ \mu$C charge at centre?
+2μC A -5μC B +2μC C -5μC D 1μC O A,C opposite corners (equal) · B,D opposite corners (equal)

Fig 3.1 — A and C are diagonally opposite (+2 μC each); B and D are diagonally opposite (−5 μC each)

A and C are at opposite corners — equal charges, equal distances to O, forces on the 1 μC charge are equal and exactly opposite. They cancel.
B and D are at opposite corners — equal charges (−5 μC each), equal distances to O, forces are equal and exactly opposite. They cancel.
★ Answer $$\text{Net force} = 0 \quad \text{(by symmetry)}$$
Q 1.7
(a) Why can't a field line have sudden breaks? (b) Why can't two field lines cross?
Part (a)

A field line represents the path along which a positive test charge would move. A sudden break would imply the charge disappears and reappears — physically impossible. Also, at a break, the field would be undefined. Field lines must be continuous.

Part (b)

If two field lines crossed at a point P, then at P there would be two different directions of the electric field simultaneously. But the electric field at any point has a unique direction. Contradiction — hence field lines never cross.

Q 1.8
$q_A = 3\ \mu$C and $q_B = -3\ \mu$C are 20 cm apart in vacuum. (a) Electric field at midpoint O? (b) Force on $-1.5\times10^{-9}$ C test charge at O?
+q_A A O (midpoint) -q_B B E_A (away from +) E_B (toward -) 10 cm 10 cm

Fig 3.2 — Both E_A and E_B point in the same direction (A to B) at midpoint O

$|q_A| = |q_B| = 3\times10^{-6}$ C, $r = 0.10$ m (each to O)
$$E_A = \frac{kq_A}{r^2} = \frac{9\times10^9\times3\times10^{-6}}{(0.10)^2} = 2.7\times10^6\text{ N/C, toward B}$$
$E_B = 2.7\times10^6$ N/C also points toward B (toward negative charge). Both add up:
★ (a) $$E = E_A + E_B = 5.4\times10^6\text{ N/C, directed from A to B}$$
Force on test charge $q_0 = -1.5\times10^{-9}$ C: $$F = q_0 E = 1.5\times10^{-9}\times5.4\times10^6 = 8.1\times10^{-3}\text{ N}$$
★ (b) $$F = 8.1\times10^{-3}\text{ N, directed from B to A (toward }+q\text{)}$$
Note: Force on negative test charge is opposite to E, hence toward A.
Q 1.9
$q_A = +2.5\times10^{-7}$ C at $(0,0,-15\text{ cm})$ and $q_B = -2.5\times10^{-7}$ C at $(0,0,+15\text{ cm})$. Total charge and dipole moment?
Total charge: $q_A + q_B = 2.5\times10^{-7} + (-2.5\times10^{-7}) = 0$
Separation $2a = 30$ cm $= 0.30$ m. Dipole moment magnitude: $$p = |q|\cdot 2a = 2.5\times10^{-7}\times0.30 = 7.5\times10^{-8}\text{ C m}$$
Direction of $\vec{p}$: from $-q$ to $+q$, i.e., from B (z = +15) to A (z = -15) — along $-\hat{z}$ direction.
★ Answer $$q_{\text{total}} = 0, \quad p = 7.5\times10^{-8}\text{ C m along }-\hat{z}$$
Q 1.10
Electric dipole moment $p = 4\times10^{-9}$ C m, aligned at $30°$ with uniform field $E = 5\times10^4$ N/C. Find torque.
$p = 4\times10^{-9}$ C m, $E = 5\times10^4$ N/C, $\theta = 30°$
$$\tau = pE\sin\theta = 4\times10^{-9}\times5\times10^4\times\sin 30°$$
$$\tau = 4\times10^{-9}\times5\times10^4\times0.5 = 10\times10^{-5}$$
★ Answer $$\tau = 10^{-4}\text{ N m}$$
04
Electric Flux & Gauss's Law
Q 1.14 · 1.15 · 1.16 · 1.17 · 1.18 · 1.19 · 1.20
$\phi = EA\cos\theta$. Gauss's Law: $\phi = q_{\text{enc}}/\varepsilon_0$. The net flux through a closed surface depends only on the enclosed charge — not on the shape or size of the surface.
Q 1.14
Three charged particles move in a uniform electrostatic field (plates). Give signs of charges and identify which has highest charge-to-mass ratio.
+ + + + + + + + + + + (positive plate) - - - - - - - - - - - (negative plate) 1 2 3 E

Fig 4.1 — Particles enter from left; field E points from +ve plate (top) to −ve plate (bottom)

Particle 1: deflects toward positive plate (upward = toward +ve plate) → positive charge
Particle 2: deflects toward negative plate (downward) → negative charge
Particle 3: deflects upward (positive), much more sharply (greater curvature) → positive charge
★ Answer

Particle 1: $+ve$  |  Particle 2: $-ve$  |  Particle 3: $+ve$

Particle 3 has the highest $q/m$ ratio (maximum curvature → maximum deflection for same field).

Q 1.15
Uniform field $\vec{E} = 3\times10^3\,\hat{i}$ N/C. Square of side 10 cm. (a) Flux when plane is parallel to $yz$-plane? (b) Flux when normal makes $60°$ with $x$-axis?
$E = 3\times10^3$ N/C, side $= 0.10$ m, $A = 0.01$ m²
Part (a) — Normal along x (parallel to yz-plane)
Normal to the square is along $\hat{i}$; angle between E and normal $= 0°$. $$\phi = EA\cos 0° = 3\times10^3\times0.01\times1$$
★ (a)$$\phi = 30\text{ N m}^2\text{ C}^{-1}$$
Part (b) — Normal at 60° to x-axis
$$\phi = EA\cos 60° = 3\times10^3\times0.01\times0.5$$
★ (b)$$\phi = 15\text{ N m}^2\text{ C}^{-1}$$
Q 1.16
Net flux of the uniform field $\vec{E} = 3\times10^3\,\hat{i}$ N/C through a cube of side 20 cm with faces parallel to coordinate planes.

In a uniform field, the flux entering one face is equal to the flux leaving the opposite face. Every face has a partner that cancels it.

★ Answer $$\phi_{\text{net}} = 0$$ Consistent with Gauss's Law — no enclosed charge, so net flux must be zero.
Q 1.17
Net outward flux through surface of a box is $8\times10^3$ N m² C⁻¹. (a) Net charge inside? (b) If flux = 0, are there no charges inside?
$\phi = 8\times10^3$ N m² C⁻¹, $\varepsilon_0 = 8.854\times10^{-12}$ C² N⁻¹ m⁻²
Part (a)
By Gauss's Law: $\phi = q_{\text{enc}}/\varepsilon_0$ $$q_{\text{enc}} = \phi\cdot\varepsilon_0 = 8\times10^3\times8.854\times10^{-12}$$
★ (a)$$q_{\text{enc}} \approx 70.8\times10^{-9}\text{ C} = 70.8\text{ nC}$$
Part (b)
No — zero net flux means zero net charge inside. There could be equal amounts of positive and negative charges inside, which give net zero. We cannot conclude the box is empty.
Q 1.18
A point charge $+10\ \mu$C is 5 cm directly above the centre of a square of side 10 cm. Flux through the square?
+10μC 5 cm square (10cm x 10cm) = 1 face of imaginary cube (edge 10 cm)

Fig 4.2 — Trick: treat square as one face of a cube; charge is at centre of cube

Key trick: The charge is 5 cm above the centre of a 10 cm square — it's at the centre of an imaginary cube of edge 10 cm. The square is one face of this cube.
Total flux from the cube (by Gauss's Law): $$\phi_{\text{total}} = \frac{q}{\varepsilon_0} = \frac{10\times10^{-6}}{8.854\times10^{-12}} = 1.13\times10^6\text{ N m}^2\text{C}^{-1}$$
By symmetry, flux is distributed equally among all 6 faces: $$\phi_{\text{square}} = \frac{\phi_{\text{total}}}{6}$$
★ Answer $$\phi_{\text{square}} = \frac{1.13\times10^6}{6} \approx 1.88\times10^5\text{ N m}^2\text{C}^{-1}$$
Q 1.19
A point charge $2.0\ \mu$C at centre of a cubic Gaussian surface (edge 9.0 cm). Net electric flux?
By Gauss's Law, flux depends only on enclosed charge, not on size or shape of surface: $$\phi = \frac{q_{\text{enc}}}{\varepsilon_0} = \frac{2.0\times10^{-6}}{8.854\times10^{-12}}$$
★ Answer $$\phi = 2.26\times10^5\text{ N m}^2\text{C}^{-1}$$
Q 1.20
Flux through a spherical Gaussian surface of radius 10 cm is $-1.0\times10^3$ N m² C⁻¹. (a) Flux if radius doubled? (b) Value of point charge?
Part (a)

Gauss's Law: $\phi = q/\varepsilon_0$ — depends only on charge, not on radius. Doubling the radius changes nothing.

★ (a) $$\phi \text{ remains } = -1.0\times10^3\text{ N m}^2\text{C}^{-1}$$
Part (b) — Charge value
$$q = \phi\cdot\varepsilon_0 = -1.0\times10^3\times8.854\times10^{-12}$$
★ (b) $$q \approx -8.85\times10^{-9}\text{ C} = -8.85\text{ nC}$$ Negative flux → negative (inward) charge
05
Applications of Gauss's Law
Q 1.21 · 1.22 · 1.23 · 1.24
Gauss's Law gives us $E$ for highly symmetric charge distributions. For a conducting sphere: $E = kq/r^2$ outside, $E = 0$ inside. For infinite line charge: $E = \lambda/2\pi\varepsilon_0 r$. For infinite plane: $E = \sigma/2\varepsilon_0$ (each side).
Q 1.21
Conducting sphere of radius 10 cm. Electric field 20 cm from centre is $1.5\times10^3$ N/C, pointing radially inward. Find net charge on sphere.
$r = 0.20$ m (from centre), $E = 1.5\times10^3$ N/C (inward $\Rightarrow$ negative charge)
For a conducting sphere, outside field behaves like a point charge: $$E = \frac{kq}{r^2} \implies q = \frac{Er^2}{k}$$
Field is inward, so charge is negative: $$q = -\frac{1.5\times10^3\times(0.20)^2}{9\times10^9} = -\frac{1.5\times10^3\times0.04}{9\times10^9}$$
★ Answer $$q \approx -6.67\times10^{-9}\text{ C} = -6.67\text{ nC}$$
Q 1.22
Uniformly charged conducting sphere of diameter 2.4 m, surface charge density $\sigma = 80.0\ \mu$C/m². (a) Charge on sphere. (b) Total electric flux leaving surface.
$R = 1.2$ m, $\sigma = 80\times10^{-6}$ C/m²
Part (a) — Charge
$$q = \sigma\cdot 4\pi R^2 = 80\times10^{-6}\times4\pi\times(1.2)^2 = 80\times10^{-6}\times18.096$$
★ (a) $$q \approx 1.45\times10^{-3}\text{ C} = 1.45\text{ mC}$$
Part (b) — Total flux
$$\phi = \frac{q}{\varepsilon_0} = \frac{1.45\times10^{-3}}{8.854\times10^{-12}}$$
★ (b) $$\phi \approx 1.64\times10^{8}\text{ N m}^2\text{ C}^{-1}$$
Q 1.23
Infinite line charge produces field $E = 9\times10^4$ N/C at distance $r = 2$ cm. Find linear charge density $\lambda$.
$E = 9\times10^4$ N/C, $r = 0.02$ m
For an infinite line charge (by Gauss's Law): $$E = \frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0 r} \implies \lambda = E\cdot2\pi\varepsilon_0 r$$
$$\lambda = 9\times10^4\times2\pi\times8.854\times10^{-12}\times0.02$$ $$= 9\times10^4\times1.113\times10^{-12} = 10^{-7}\text{ C/m}$$
★ Answer $$\lambda = 10^{-7}\text{ C/m} = 0.1\ \mu\text{C/m}$$
Q 1.24
Two large thin parallel plates with surface charge densities $+\sigma$ and $-\sigma$ on their inner faces ($\sigma = 17.0\times10^{-22}$ C/m²). Find E in: (a) outer region of plate 1, (b) outer region of plate 2, (c) between the plates.
+sigma (inner) Plate 1 -sigma (inner) Plate 2 Region (a) Region (c) Region (b) E = sigma / epsilon_0 E = 0 E = 0

Fig 5.1 — Fields from each plate cancel outside, add up between the plates

Each infinite sheet produces $E = \sigma/2\varepsilon_0$ on each side. In the outer regions, the two fields (one from each plate) are equal and opposite — they cancel. $$E_{\text{outer}} = \frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0} - \frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0} = 0$$
Between the plates, both fields point in the same direction (from $+$ to $-$): $$E_{\text{between}} = \frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0} + \frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0} = \frac{\sigma}{\varepsilon_0}$$ $$= \frac{17\times10^{-22}}{8.854\times10^{-12}} \approx 1.92\times10^{-10}\text{ N/C}$$
★ Answer

(a) Outer region, Plate 1: $E = 0$

(b) Outer region, Plate 2: $E = 0$

(c) Between plates: $E = \sigma/\varepsilon_0 \approx 1.92\times10^{-10}$ N/C