A thundercloud has an electric charge of 43.2 C near the top of the cloud and -38.7 C near the bottom of the cloud. The magnitude of the electric force between these two charges is 3.95 x 10 ^6 N. What is the average separation between these charges?

Can anyone help?

Sure, I can help you with that!

To find the average separation between two charges, we can use the equation for electric force:

F = (k * |q1 * q2|) / r^2

where F is the magnitude of the electric force, k is the electrostatic constant (9 x 10^9 N m^2/C^2), |q1| and |q2| are the magnitudes of the charges, and r is the separation between the charges.

In this case, the magnitude of the electric force is given as 3.95 x 10^6 N, and the magnitudes of the charges are 43.2 C and 38.7 C.

Now, we need to rearrange the equation to solve for r:

r^2 = (k * |q1 * q2|) / F

Plugging in the given values and solving for r:

r^2 = ((9 x 10^9 N m^2/C^2) * (43.2 C * 38.7 C)) / (3.95 x 10^6 N)

r^2 = (1511.52 N m^2/C^2) / (3.95 x 10^6 N)

r^2 = 0.383 N m^2/C^2

Taking the square root of both sides, we find:

r ≈ sqrt(0.383) ≈ 0.62 m

Therefore, the average separation between these charges is approximately 0.62 meters.