What does it mean when two point charges form a dipole a small distance away from each other?
1 Answer
Small, meaning close enough together.
Two charges can only interact well enough to form a dipole if they are close enough together. Too far apart and they are essentially independent charges (does not mean they aren't interacting).
Consider the coulombic interaction between two point charges:
V(vecr) = (q_1 q_2)/(4piepsilon_0vecr_(12)V(→r)=q1q24πε0→r12 where
q_iqi is the charge of particleii ,epsilon_0 = 8.854 xx 10^(-12) "F"cdot"m"^(-1)ε0=8.854×10−12F⋅m−1 is the vacuum permittivity constant, andvecr_(12)→r12 is the radial separation between two particles.
This means the coulombic potential of the two charges depends on the distance between them and the charges' magnitudes. Large
vecmu_(12) = qcdotvecr_(12)→μ12=q⋅→r12
An example of a small charge is
An example of "small" for molecules is a few