coulomb
Bob Sinclair
Newtons law has to due with mass and ATTRACTION only Coulombs law has to due with charge and ATTRACTION AND REPULSION
MagnestismThe Law of Attraction and Repulsion states that like charges repel each other, and unlike charges attract. For example, two positively charged objects would repel, whereas a positively charged object and a negatively charged object would attract.
an attraction or repulsion between electrically charged that opperates according to the law of electric forces charges and Coulomb's law of electric force
It means that the force of electrical attraction (or repulsion) between two particles with units charges will be greater than the gravitational attraction between two particles with unit mass which are the same distance apart.
i hope that the friction and magnetism has a contact in common and friction is also about newton's third law...evan magnetism studies newton's second law...i hope that friction is all about attraction and repulsion...attraction and repulsion are common in magnets ...so there might be a deep relationship between friction and magnetism..!!
Law of resistance: What you resist persists. based on the same concept as law of attraction
the force of attraction or repulsion = (k*q1*q2*r')/r^3 where r' is the position vector
Gravity is a force of attraction only. Newton's law describes only an inverse square attraction, which is different than the inverse square law of electric charge which allows both attraction and repulsion. Within the theory of general relativity, gravity has a different interpretation as curvature of space-time, but that is not essential to the present question.
That the effects obey the square of the distance "law".
The possible interactions between two charged objects are: law of repulsion: when two objects have the same charge they repel each other because the force of attraction is weaker Law of Attraction: When two objects have two different charges they attract each other because the force of attraction is stronger.
That attraction is described mathematically by Coulomb's Law.