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)=q1q24πε0r12

where q_iqi is the charge of particle ii, epsilon_0 = 8.854 xx 10^(-12) "F"cdot"m"^(-1)ε0=8.854×1012Fm1 is the vacuum permittivity constant, and vecr_(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 rr, small potential. Large enough potential, and a dipole forms, where a dipole between two point charges of charge pmq±q is defined as:

vecmu_(12) = qcdotvecr_(12)μ12=qr12

An example of a small charge is e^(-) = 1.6022 xx 10^(-19) "C"e=1.6022×1019C.

An example of "small" for molecules is a few stackrel("o")("A")oA. The bond length of the "OH"OH bond in "H"_2"O"H2O is 0.9580.958 stackrel("o")("A")oA, where 11 stackrel("o")("A") = 10^(-10) "m"oA=1010m is an angstrom.