Physics, asked by chettrisushmita, 2 months ago

if the electric force between point charges varies inversely as the cube of the distance will gauss's law be valid​

Answers

Answered by prathmeshankushe
0

 the electrostatic force between two charged particles varied according to the inverse of the cube of distance between them, how would it affect the Gauss Law?

Well we know if a metallic sphere is given some charge, the charge resides on the surface and the electric field inside is zero. I was told that the fact that the charge is on the surface can also be explained by Gauss Law but I cannot understand how.

Moreover, as said before, if the force varied as the inverse of the cube of the distance in between, how will the field inside the sphere and charge distribution be affected?

I can see that as electric flux through a surface is defined as the closed integral of electric field over the surface, that would surely imply the electric flux varies with distance, which would otherwise be independent of the distance, if the inverse square law is followed.

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