Q69.Let m1 and m2 be the slopes of the tangents drawn from the point P(4, 1) to the hyperbola H : 25y2 −x216 = 1 If Q is the point from which the tangents drawn to H have slopes |m1| and |m2| and they make positive (PQ)2 intercepts α and β on the x− axis, then αβ is equal to _______.
What This Question Tests
The question tests finding slopes of tangents from an external point to a hyperbola, calculating intercepts, and then using distance formula for a related point.
Concepts Tested
Formulas Used
x^2/a^2 - y^2/b^2 = 1
y = mx +/- sqrt(a^2 m^2 - b^2) (tangent to hyperbola)
Distance formula: sqrt((x_2-x_1)^2 + (y_2-y_1)^2)
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2.1 Two charges 5 × 10–8 C and –3 × 10–8 C are located 16 cm apart. At what point(s) on the line joining the two charges is the electric potential zero? Take the potential at infinity to be zero.
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9.8 A beam of light converges at a point P. Now a lens is placed in the path of the convergent beam 12cm from P. At what point does the beam converge if the lens is (a) a convex lens of focal length 20cm, and (b) a concave lens of focal length 16cm?
2.4 — Potential Due To An Electric Dipole
Physics Class 11 · Chapter 2
2.4 POTENTIAL DUE TO AN ELECTRIC DIPOLE As we learnt in the last chapter, an electric dipole consists of two charges q and –q separated by a (small) distance 2a. Its total charge is zero. It is characterised by a dipole moment vector p whose magnitude is q × 2a and which points in the direction from –q to q (Fig. 2.5). We also saw that the electric field of a dipole at a point with position vector r depends not just on the magnitude r, but also on the angle between r and p. Further, 49 Reprint 2025-26 Physics the field falls off, at large distance, not as 1/r 2 (typical of field due to a single charge) but as 1/r3. We, now, determine the electric potential due to a dipole and contrast it with the potential due to a single charge. As before, we take the origin at the centre of the dipole. Now we know that the electric field obeys the superposition principle. Since potential is related to the work done by the field, electrostatic potential also follows the superposition principle. Thus, the potential due to the dipole is the sum of potentials due to the charges q and –q 1 q q V = − (2.9)FIGURE 2.5 Quantities involved in the calculation 4 πε0 r1 r2 of potential due to a dipole. where r1 and r2 are the distances of the point P from q and –q, respectively. Now, by geometry, r12 = r 2 + a 2 − 2ar cosq r22 = r 2 + a 2 + 2ar cosq (2.10) We take r much greater than a ( r a ) and retain terms only upto the first order in a/r 2 2 2a cosθ a 2 r1 = r 1 − + 2 r r 2 2a cosθ (2.11) ≅ r 1 − r Similarly, 2 2 2a cosθ (2.12) r2 ≅ r 1 + r Using the Binomial theorem and retaining terms upto the first order in a/r ; we obtain, 1 a 1 2a cos θ − 1 / 2 1 cos θ ≅ 1 − ≅ 1 + [2.13(a)] r1 r r r r 1 a 1 2a cos θ − 1 / 2 1 cos θ ≅ 1 + ≅ 1 − [2.13(b)] r2 r r r r Using Eqs. (2.9) and (2.13) and p = 2qa, we get q 2 acosθ p cos θ V = = 4 πε0 r 2 4 πε0r 2 (2.14) 50 Now, p cos q = p.rˆ Reprint 2025-26 Electrostatic Potential and Capacitance where ˆr is the unit vector along the position vector OP. The electric potential of a dipole is then given by 1 p.rˆ V = 2 ; (r >> a) (2.15) 4 πε0 r Equation (2.15) is, as indicated, approximately true only for distances large compared to the size of the dipole, so that higher order terms in a/r are negligible. For a point dipole p at the origin, Eq. (2.15) is, however, exact. From Eq. (2.15), potential on the dipole axis (q = 0, p ) is given by 1 p V = ± 2 (2.16) 4 πε0 r (Positive sign for q = 0, negative sign for q = p.) The potential in the equatorial plane (q = p/2) is zero. The important contrasting features of electric potential of a dipole from that due to a single charge are clear from Eqs. (2.8) and (2.15): (i) The potential due to a dipole depends not just on r but also on the angle between the position vector r and the dipole moment vector p. (It is, however, axially symmetric about p. That is, if you rotate the position vector r about p, keeping q fixed, the points corresponding to P on the cone so generated will have the same potential as at P.) (ii) The electric dipole potential falls off, at large distance, as 1/r 2, not as 1/r, characteristic of the potential due to a single charge. (You can refer to the Fig. 2.5 for graphs of 1/r 2 versus r and 1/r versus r, drawn there in another context.)
📋 Question Details
- Chapter
- Hyperbola
- Topic
- Tangents from external point and properties of hyperbola
- Year
- 2023
- Shift
- 13 Apr Shift 1
- Q Number
- Q69
- Type
- Numerical
- NCERT Ref
- Class 11 Mathematics Ch 11: Conic Sections
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