A spherical water drop 1.20µm in diameter is suspended in calm air owing to a downward–directed atmospheric electric field #E = 462 N/C#. (a) What is the weight of the drop? (b) How many excess electrons does it have?

1 Answer
Feb 20, 2016

Weight of the water droplet: #w=8.8668\times10^{-15} N#,
Number of excess electrons #N_e=120#.

Explanation:

#m# - mass of the water droplet ( in kg ),
#q# - the total charge on the water droplet ( in coulombs ),
#E=462 N/C# - electric field strength,

#e=1.602176\times10^{-19} C# - fundamental unit of charge,
#g = 9.8 m/s^2# - acceleration due to gravity,
#\rho_w = 1000.0 (kg)/m^3# - density of water,
#d=1.20\times10^{-6} m# - diameter of the water droplet,

(a) Weight of the water droplet :

Volume of the water droplet: #V=4/3\pi(d/2)^3=9.0478\times10^{-19} m^3#
Mass of the water droplet: #m=V\rho_w = 9.0478\times10^{-16} kg#
Weight of the water droplet: #w=mg= 8.8668\times10^{-15}N#

(b) How many excess electrons: To calculate the number of excess electrons first calculate the total charge on the water droplet using the fact that its weight (#mg#) balances its electric force (#F_E=E.q#).

Total charge: #F_E=m.g \qquad \rightarrow q = (mg)/E=1.91922\times10^{-19}C#

If #N_e# is the number of excess electrons, #q=N_e.e#

#N_e=q/e = 120#