newtons gravitational law is similar to that of coulomb's law...
The unit of the constant of proportionality in Coulomb's law is Nm²/C² or Vm.
The "Q" in Coulomb's Law represents the magnitude of the point charges involved in the interaction. It is the charge of one of the point charges that determines the strength of the electrostatic force between them.
Both Coulomb's law and Newton's law of gravity describe the force between two objects based on their charges (in Coulomb's law) or masses (in Newton's law of gravity). Both laws follow an inverse square relationship, where the force decreases as the distance between the objects increases. Additionally, both laws are fundamental principles in physics that describe the fundamental forces of electromagnetism and gravity, respectively.
A statement that is not true for Coulomb's law is that the force between two charges depends on the type of material the charges are made of. Coulomb's law only depends on the magnitude of the charges and the distance between them, not on the material properties.
The unit of force in the Coulomb's law equation is the Newton (N).
Limitations of coulombs law
No
you can make your own mathematical law, but it should be very similar and related to the original mathematical law. also there is an another issue, sometimes your own mathematical law will not work, so it is very important and better to use the original mathematical law to avoid mistakes and to get the correct answer.
Newtons law has to due with mass and ATTRACTION only Coulombs law has to due with charge and ATTRACTION AND REPULSION
The mathematical form of Ohms law is I=V divided by R. I is current, V is voltage while R is the resistance.
coulombs law
The mathematical expression is Q = nF, where Q is the total charge in coulombs, n is the number of moles of electrons transferred (in this case, 3 moles for iron III sulfate to iron metal), and F is the Faraday constant (96,485 C/mol). Therefore, the number of coulombs necessary would be Q = 3 * 96485 C/mol = 289,455 C.
No, a scientific law cannot be demonstrated mathematically as mathematical proofs area form of rationalism (logical based) whereas scientific proofs are a form of empiricism (evidence based), so neither a mathematical law can be proved scientifically nor a scientif law be proved mathematically.
A description, often mathematical, of how (not why) a process occurs.
yes
The unit of the constant of proportionality in Coulomb's law is Nm²/C² or Vm.
Observations form the basis of hypothesis, Mathematical modelling builds a therory based on the hypothesis. Proof of the validity of the model forms the law.