Coulomb's law
In
physics,
Coulomb's Law is an
inverse-square law indicating the magnitude and direction of electrical
force that one stationary, electrically charged substance of small volume exerts on another. When one is interested only in the magnitude of the force (and not in its direction), it may be easiest to consider a simplified,
scalar version of the Law
where
q1 is the charge on one substance,
q2 is the charge on the other,
r is the distance between them, and ε
0 is a universal constant, the
permittivity of vacuum. (See
physical constants for more information. Note that 1/(μ
0ε
0) = c
2