Physics, asked by Hriday5791, 1 month ago

two charge equal in magnitudes but opposite in polarity and separated by distance constitude a

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Answered by chakladershreyasi
1

Answer:

The simplest example of an electric dipole is a pair of electric charges of two opposite signs and equal magnitude separated by distance

Explanation:

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Answered by durgeshbishi2
0

Answer: dipole

Explanation: As two charges equal in magnitudes but opposite in polarity and separated by distance, constitute a dipoles.

Dipoles, whether electric or magnetic, can be characterized by their dipole moment, a vector quantity. For a simple electric dipole, the electric dipole moment points from a negative charge to a positive charge, and its magnitude is equal to the power of each charge of separation between the charges.

An electric dipole consists of two opposite charges attached to a molecule and separated by a certain distance. The attraction of charges is prevented by the rigidity of the molecular structure. The potential produced by the dipole will be different from the potential produced by one charge and will depend on the directional orientation of the dipole towards the other charge.

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